VOL. VI.] NOTES. 101 



B.B., No. 29147, marked as No. 27373 on June 19th, 1912. 

 Recovered at Heysham, Morecambe Bay, Lancashire, on July 

 12th, 1912. Reported by Mr. S. Cowan. 



B.B., No. 28920, marked as No. 29147. Recovered at Workmgton, 

 Cumberland, on July 20th, 1912. Reported by Mr. H. Oldfield. 

 B.B., No. 28883, marked by Mr. F. W. Smalley at Ravenglass, 

 Cumberland, on June 17th, 1912. Recovered at Leece, near 

 Ulverston, Lancashire, on July 4th, 1912. Reported by Mr. 

 J. Brockbank. 



B.B., No. 22983, marked by Mr. J. S. T. Walton, at Denton Fell, 

 Cumberland, on June 11th, 1911, as a nestling. Recovered at 

 Dornock, by Annan, Dmnfriesshire, about the first week in July, 

 1912. Reported by Mr. J. T. M'Glasson. 



Lesser Redpoll nesting in Wiltshire. ^ — Mr. B. Young 

 records in the Field (15. VI. 12, p. 1219) that a pair of Carduelis 

 I. cabaret have nested at Stratford-sub-Castle, Salisbury, this 

 year. Mr. Young states that he has had excellent views of 

 the birds, enabling him to identify them satisfactorily. 



Grey Wagtail nesting in West Sussex. — Mr. H. M. 

 Langdale records [Zool., 1912, p. 228) that he found a nest 

 of Motacilla b. boarula on April 30th, 1912, with thi-ee eggs, 

 near Midhurst. It will be remembered that Colonel Feilden 

 reported a nest from East Sussex in our June issue (p. 17). 



Northern Willow-Warbler in Solway. — ^Miss A. C- 

 Jackson, a most up-to-date ornithologist, records {Scot. Nat., 

 1912, p. 163) that a Willow-Warbler taken at the Mull of 

 Galloway Light on the night of May 16th- 17th, 1911, has been 

 identified by Dr. C. B. Ticehurst as a specimen of Phylloscopus 

 t. eversmanni, which has not previously been detected on the 

 western side of Great Britain. 



Continental Song-Thrush in Solway and Moray. — Miss 

 A. C. Jackson records {Scot. Nat., 1912, p. 163) the occurrence 

 of two Turdus ph. philomelus at the Mull of Galloway Light- 

 house on the night of March 30th-31st, 1911, and one on the 

 same date at the Tarbatness Light. We have no previous 

 record of actual specimens from the west coast of Great Britain, 

 and up to the present no identified examples have been 

 recorded from Ireland, although the biid undoubtedly visits 

 that country. 



Greenland Falcon in Outer Hebrides. — An adult male 

 Falco r. candicans was taken on April 2nd, 1912, at Barra 

 (W. L. Macgillivray, Scot. Nat., 1912, p. 164). 



