FRANKLIN’S GROUSE. 
Canachites franklini. 
Extremely similar to the foregoing, but with the 
tail black to the end, or bordered with white; its cov- 
erts white-tipped. The female has the tail feathers 
tipped with white and the upper tail coverts streaked 
with white, as also have the full-grown young of both 
sexes which have not yet assumed the plumage of 
the adult. It is slightly larger than the Canada grouse: 
length, over 15 inches; wing, 7% inches; tail, 5 inches 
or over. 
Franklin’s grouse is found in southern Alaska, cen- 
tral British Columbia and west central Alberta, south 
to western Montana, central Idaho and northern 
Oregon east of the coast range. At many points in 
northwestern Montana, northern and central Idaho it 
is abundant. It is the bird commonly called “fool hen” 
in the western mountains, though this, after all, is a 
general term applied to any grouse or quail that has 
not yet learned that man is an enemy to be dreaded. 
The differences in plumage between Franklin’s 
grouse and the Canada grouse are so slight that they 
are not likely to be noticed by the average gunner, 
though at once obvious to the ornithologist. So far 
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