The Tawny Pipit. 203 



tation, or on a boulder, or even a paling. Many of the birds were on the road, 

 where you could witness their actions very closely as they ran up and down like 

 a Wagtail, often giving their tail a sharp jerk, accompanied by a flicking movement 

 of the wings. They seemed to especially prefer a large unenclosed plain of rough 

 land on which no crop was sown, what we should call summer-fallow in England. 

 Here I repeatedly saw the birds soar into the air for a little way and sing their 

 loud but simple song, which put me in mind of the Sky- Lark's notes, although 

 not so rich or so sweet. It does not soar so high as the Tree-Pipit, and seems 

 anxious to get to the ground again. When alarmed by the report of a gun, the 

 birds close at hand would generally rise for some distance into the air and betake 

 themselves to safer quarters in a drooping flight, uttering a short njhit or yhit as 

 they went."* 



Col. L. H. Irby, speaking of Tawny Pipits on the Spanish side of the Straits 

 of Gibraltar, says: — "We never met with them on low ground, and there is no 

 doubt they breed high up on the sierras." 



The Tawny Pipit is a late breeder, building its nest towards the end of May 

 under a shrub, amongst growing crops, beneath a tuft of rank herbage, or under 

 the shelter of a stone or clod of earth. The materials of the nest consist of dry 

 grass, bents, and roots, with a lining of horsehair : the eggs number from five to 

 six, greyish-, or creamy- white, streaked or spotted somewhat heavily with dark- 

 grey and purplish-, or reddish-brown. 



The food consists principally, if not entirely, of insects and their larvae, and 

 doubtless of spiders and small centipedes, as is the general habit of insectivorous 

 birds. 



I should not anticipate that much satisfaction would be obtained from keeping 

 the Tawny Pipit either in cage or aviary, unless its natural tameness induced it 

 to sing : my Tit-Larks, although by no means unusually wild, never once sang in 

 confinement; yet they were in an aviary 16 feet long: their only charm, therefore, 

 consisted in their graceful actions, both on the ground and when flying ; but 

 neither in colouring or grace can they at all compare with Wagtails. 



* O. V. .\pliu (Zoologist, 1892, p. 14) s.\v.s:— "Alarin-uote chit, chit; soug short, but with a few rather 

 good uoles." 



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