THE AMERICAN BARN SWALLOW. _ ae 
its closed beak, swaying from side to side the while; and, of course, fallen 
dirt or sand is carried out in the mouth. Sometimes the little miner finds a 
lens-shaped tunnel more convenient, and I have seen them as much as seven 
inches in width and only two in height. While the members of a colony, 
especially if it be a small one, usually occupy a straggling, horizontal line of 
holes, their burrows are not infrequently to be seen in loose tiers, so that the 
bank presents a honey-combed appearance. 
Communal life seems a pleasant thing to these Swallows, and there is 
usually a considerable stir of activity about the quarters. A good deal of social 
twittering also attends the unending gyrations. The wonder is that the rapidly 
moving parts of this aerial kaleidoscope never collide, and that the cases of 
turning up at the wrong number are either so few or so amicably adjusted. 
The nesting season is, however, beset with dangers. Weasels and their ilk 
sometimes find entrance to the nesting burrows, and they are an easy prey to 
underbred small boys as well. The undermining of the nesting cliff by the 
swirling river sometimes precipitates an entire colony—at least its real and 
personal property—to destruction. 
A certain populous bank near Chelan faced west, and whenever the west 
wind blew, the fine volcanic ash, which composed the cliff, was whirled into 
the mouths of the burrows, so rapidly, indeed, that the inmates required to be 
frequently at work in order to maintain an exit. A few dessicated carcasses, 
which I came across in old, filled-up burrows, I attributed to misfortune in 
this regard. 
Bank Swallows are the least musical of the Swallow kind,—unless, per- 
haps, we except the Rough-winged species, which is naturally associated in 
mind with this. They have, nevertheless, a characteristic twitter, an unmelodi- 
ous sound like the rubbing together of two pebbles. An odd effect is produced 
when the excited birds are describing remonstrant parabolas at an intruder’s 
head. The heightened pitch in the tones of the rapidly approaching bird, fol- 
lowed instantly by the lower tone of full retreat, is enough to startle a slumber- 
ing conscience in one who meditates mischief on a Swallow’s home. 
No. 130. 
AMERICAN BARN SWALLOW. 
A. O. U. No. 613. Hirundo erythrogastra Bodd. 
Synonyms.—AmMeEricAN BARN SWALLOW. FoRK-TAILED SWALLOW. 
Description — Adult: Above lustrous steel-blue; in front an imperfect 
collar of the same hue; forehead chestnut; lores black; throat and breast rufous; 
the remaining underparts, including lining of wings, more or less tinged with 
