74 HOW TO NAME THE BIRDS 



WINTER GROUP. 



LAND BIRDS. 



Comprising those species that come down from the north 

 in the fall, pass the winter within territory, and return north 

 in spring. 



NEUTRAL LIST. 



Nos. 180-186 : Showing neither Black, Yellow, Blue, nor 

 Red. 



180. BOHEMIAN WAXWING. 



Orange-brown. 



7-8. Crested ; see 200, and compare with Cedar Wax- 

 wing, 255. 



1§1. SNOW BUNTING. 



Variegation of white and brown, with little black. 

 6X-7- See 190. 



182. TITLARK: PIPIT: BROWN LARK: WAGTAIL. 



Dark brown Light yellowish-brown, spotted. 



6>^. Above, minutely streaked; superciliary line, buff; 



wings and tail, darker ; outer tail-feathers, partly white; 



breast and sides, dark-spotted. 



In summer, entirely beyond northern edge ; in winter, as far nqrth 

 as Mass. , near coast, and occa. in S. Pa ; nest, crude, on ground ; 

 eggs, 4-5, dark chocolate ; feeble note, tremulous flight, and jerking 

 tail. 



183. IPSWICH SPARROW. 



Grayish-brown White, brown-streaked. 



6^. Median light crown-line ; long whitish superciliary 

 line ; 2 indistinct whitish wing-bars ; a general rufous ap- 



