A Day with Lake County Birds 61 



addition to the warblers listed, we saw three or four more 

 varieties which were not positively identified. The list 

 follows : 



Eobin Yellow Warbler 



Bluebird Oven-bird 



Wood Thrush Hooded Warbler 



Cedar Waxwing Black-throated Blue 

 Kingbird Warbler 



Wood Pewee Blue-winged Warbler 



Phoebe Tennessee Warbler 



Crested Flycatcher Bay-breasted Warbler 



Acadian Flycatcher Canada Warbler 



Least Flycatcher Blackburnian Warbler 



Traill's Flycatcher Magnolia Warbler 



Yellow-throated vireo Black-poll Warbler 



Warbling Vireo Maryland Yellow-throat 



Ked-eyed Vireo Yellow-breasted Chat 



Chestnut-sided Warbler Cape May Warbler 



Of the thrushes we were disappointed in not record- 

 ing the Wilson's Thrush, and the Olive-backed Thrush. 

 The Hermit Thrushes had all gone north some time before. 

 Of the warblers we were a little too late for some of the 

 early ones, such as the Black and White Warbler, the 

 Palm Warbler, the Myrtle Warbler, and one or two oth- 

 ers, but we were disappointed in not seeing the Nashville 

 Warbler, the Parula Warbler, the Redstart, the Water- 

 Thrush, and the Black-throated Green Warbler. 



Lake County boasts of six common species of wood- 

 peckers, of which we succeeded in recording four, as fol- 

 lows: 



Yellow-bellied Sapsucker Red -headed Woodpecker 

 Downy Woodijecker Northern Flicker 



We were unable to locate the Hairy Woodpecker, al- 

 though we usually saw several individuals in passing 

 through these woods. The Red-bellied Woodpecker was 

 also conspicuous by its absence. 



Owing to the fact that swallows of all kinds had been 



