BIRDS OF THE PACIFIC DISTRICT. 227 



British Columbia. JohnFannin. Rare summer resi- 

 dent. 



254. Harporhynchus redivivus (Gamb.) CALIFORNIAN 

 THRASHER. 



San Diego. B. F. Goss. March 16, 1884, two nests 

 and full sets of eggs. 



San Diego. L. B. April 12, 1884, two broods of 

 young just out of nests; moderately common here. 



Poway. F. E. Blaisdell. Common resident. 



San Bernardino. F. Stephens. Tolerably common 

 resident of the valleys and foothills. 



Oakland. W. E. Bryant. Rare winter visitant. 



Berkeley. T. S. Palmer. Rare accidental visitant. 



Ukiah. G. E. Aull. Tolerably common resident. 



Central California. L. B. Very common in the foot- 

 hills, occasionally seen in the valley thickets. 



Red Bluff. February 35, 1885, quite common and 

 no doubt constant resident, as the species is not migra- 

 tory to any extent. Mr. B. W. Evermanii informed me 

 February 16, 1881, that it was then nesting at Santa 

 Paula, Ventura County. It was mated, and probably 

 doing the same in the lower part of Calaveras County a 

 week later. The spring of 1881 was unusually early, 

 that of 1884 unusually backward. 



255. Harporhynchus lecontei (Lawr.) LECONTE'S 

 THRASHER. 



Gila River, Fort Yuma, Mojave River. Baird, Brewer 

 and Ridgway. 



F. Stephens (Auk, October, 1884.) Extreme west- 

 ern end of the Colorado Desert at the foot of the San 

 Jacinto Peak, rare; nest and eggs taken. 



Agua Caliente, San Diego County. F. Stephens. 

 March 22, 1886, one; several seen between March 29 and 

 April 15. 



