ORNITHOLOGICAL NOTES. 553 
On the 19th I noticed in the same place the first Pied 
Flycatcher (Muscicapa atricapilla). 
I must also mention as a remarkable fact that the Martin, 
which used to be so common in the neighbourheod of Prague, 
is this year very rare; the first came very late, and they are, 
up to the present time, quite sparingly distributed. The Red- 
backed Shrike is also much Jess abundant than in former 
years. I certainly see a few every day, but in places where 
several pairs used to live close together there are now only 
one or two individuals at the most. 
In one of the gardens inside Prague that I have so often 
mentioned in my previous paper a pair of Turtle-Doves have 
now established themselves; and there I also observed the 
Great Tit (Parus major) and the Long-tailed Tit (Acredula 
caudata) at their nests. 
On the 22nd I found a nest of the Reed-Warbler (Acro- 
cephalus arundinaceus), with five eges, in a low willow-bush 
on the bank of the river Beraun, and near the town of the 
same name. 
On the 24th I came across several pairs of the Common 
Sandpiper (Actitis hypoleucos) at their nests on the little 
islands in the same locality that are covered with willows; and 
I also saw a couple of Stonechats (Pratincola rubicola) on a 
meadow surrounded by bushes, near the bank of the river. 
This is by no means a common bird here. 
The late appearance of the Red-backed Shrike this year is 
worthy of note. Some days ago I thought that it had chosen 
another line of migration and had strayed away from its 
usual haunts, for from the 16th to the 22nd of May I noticed 
remarkably few ; but now fresh arrivals are showing them- 
selves from day to day, and in all the localities upon which I 
am able to keep a watchful eye the suitable spots will soon 
be stocked with the usual number of these birds. 
