256 WOOD THRUSH. 



upper parts, faintly spotted breast, and particularly by 

 its notes. 



The Veery's characteristic calls are a clearly wliistled 

 ivhee-o or ^vhee-you, the first note the higher, and a some- 

 what softer tdo-whee or teweu^ in which the first note is 

 the lower. Its song is one of the most mysterious and 

 thrilling sounds to l)e heard in the woods. Elsewhere I 

 have descril)ed it as "a weird, rino-ino- monotone of 

 blended alto and soprano tones. ... It has neither 

 break nor pause, and seems to emanate from no one 

 place. If you can imagine the syllables vee-r-r-hu [or 

 ^ee-ry] rejieated eight or nine times around a series of 

 intertwining circles, the description may enable you to 

 recognize the Veery's song." 



The AYood Thrush is a more southern bird than the 

 Veery, breeding from as far south as Florida, north- 

 Wood Thrush ward to southern Vermont and Minne- 

 Tuiuiiis ,„„.st,iiinif<. sota. It winters in Central America 

 Plate Lxxn . ^^^^ reaches us in the spring, al)out April 

 30, and remains until October 1. Its nest is built about 

 the middle of May, and is generally placed in a sapling 

 some eight feet from the o-round. Tlie eo;(rs are greenish 

 blue. 



The AVood Thrush is not such a recluse as the Yeery. 

 He is, it is true, a wood lover, and shares with the Yeery 

 his secluded haunts, but he seems equally at home in 

 maples and elms alwut our houses, or even in the more 

 quiet village streets. He is therefore more often heard 

 than his mysterious relative, and, as a voice, is familiar to 

 many who do not know the singer's name. 



The call-notes of the Wood Thrush are a liquid quirt 

 and sharp p'd-i>'it. The latter is an alarm note, which, 

 when the bird fears for the safety of its young, is uttered 

 with much increased force and rapidity. It can be closely 

 imitated by striking two large pebbles together. 



