II 
SepGr WARBLER.—A summer visitant to many a pond, and 
pool, and reedy ditch. 
GRASSHOPPER WARBLER.—A summer visitant, but not at all 
common anywhere. Its powers of concealment are 
very great. 
Savi’s WARBLER.—Norfolk boasts of the first and the last 
Savi’s warbler killed in England, yet only six have 
occurred, all in the “ Broad” district, within a radius of 
about six miles. It is now, perhaps, extinct among us. 
GREAT TiTmMousE.—Common everywhere. Yarrell states 
that the eggs are from six to nine in number, but I 
have known nests containing eleven, twelve, and even 
thirteen. 
Biue Titmouse. “Pickcheese.”!—Common ; notorious 
for the strange situations it selects to nest in; also 
lays a great many eggs. I have had as many as 
eleven in one of my nest-boxes, and all hatched off. 
CoaL Titmouse. Larus britannicus—Common resident. 
Less abundant than the marsh titmouse about Cromer, 
where I think it is far scarcer than it used to be. 
[EuropeAN Coa Titmouse. Ff. ater.—Whether or not 
this, the Scandinavian form of our common coal 
tit, be distinct, two or three specimens have oc- 
curred, and in like manner, the recognition in Nor- 
folk of the Scandinavian forms of the marsh tit and 
long-tailed tit is probably only a question of time. ] 
Marsu TrirmMousE.—Tolerably common. I. have - often 
watched with amazement this diminutive bird carrying 
off in its bill the large grains of maize put down for 
fowls or pheasants; but from having found them 
dropped under bushes, believe that they only eat the 
softer part. 
1 My father is of opinion that it owes its provincial name of ‘* Pick- 
cheese” to its visits to the dairies in the days of the window-tax, 
when glass was not allowed, and perforated zinc had not yet taken 
the place of wooden splines. 
