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NATURAL HISTORY OF THE FARM 



This is the age of birds. They outnumber, in species, all 

 other air-breathing vertebrates put together. Doubtless, 

 their ability to fly and thereby to find food and to escape 

 enemies has had much to do with this preponderence. Hardly 

 any other living things have acquired such power of flight, 

 and no others have established regular seasonal 

 migrations between summer and winter homes. 

 A hundred or more species may be found in any 

 good locality in the course of a year more than 

 half of them, song-birds. A few are permanent 

 residents; a few are winter visitors from the far 

 north; many are transient visitors that winter 

 south of us and summer north of us, and a sub- 

 stantial number, including all the song-birds that 

 we value most highly, are summer residents. 

 These return to us every spring and settle and 

 build nests and sing and rear their broods. Who 

 does not feel a thrill of pleasure at the return 

 of the bluebird, that soft- voiced harbinger of 

 spring? 



Wild birds they are, yet they do not mind our 

 presence if we treat them well. And a number 

 of the most charming little birds will settle near 

 us and remain with us year after year if we 

 provide them suitable places for nest building, located in 

 safe and congenial surroundings. 



It is a pleasant aspect of evolution to contemplate that the 

 birds we like best the birds that sing and that fashion beauti- 

 ful nests and rear their young with most parental care are the 

 ones that have been and are most successful in the race of life. 

 While a number of the smaller birds look much alike on 

 first approach, each species has its distinguishing peculiarities 

 that a little careful observation will reveal peculiarities of 

 color and attitude, of flight and of notes, of haunts and of 



fo?birds. es 



