CHAPTER IX. 



EXTENSION IN FIFESHIEE.^ 



Peemanently inhabited by the species, Fife can, however, 

 hardly claim to be distinctively a Capercailhe country, as the 

 woods are not, as a rule, of very great extent, as in Perth and 

 Forfar. At one or two localities, however, they are increasing 

 steadily in numbers, as, for instance, at Lathirsk, east of Auch- 

 termuchty, where they were introduced a few years ago, and 

 where, in 1877-8, there would be from 20 to 30 birds. 



1863. The first Capercaillie seen in Fife, so far as I can 

 learn, was shot fifteen or sixteen years ago at Kankeillor, to 

 the west of Cupar (37 miles from © ), after a long continued 

 gale from the north — auct. Robert Tullis, Esq. It is true. 

 Captain H. W. Feilden informs me that he has an indistinct 

 recollection of a Capercaillie having been killed at Falkland 

 Castle, where there are extensive fir woods, as early as 1847, 

 but I have been unable to obtain more exact statistics. 



1864. Stragglers appeared about Colessie, near Auchter- 

 muchty, and around that neighbourhood, and at several 

 localities along the Fife -Perth march, but it was not until 

 much later that the birds appeared to take a hold on the 

 county. 



1868. A great blank now occurs, and we hear nothing more 

 of the Capercaillie in Fife until 1868, when tlie birds arrived 



^ I liiid I have returns from at least twenty localities in Fife. 



