132 coRvnm 



Mr. Selby refers to one seen in Netherwitton Wood in 

 the county of Northumberland, in the autumn of 1819, by 

 his relation Admiral Mitford, who also, during an excursion 

 in Switzerland, September, 1825, met with a large flock 

 of Nutcrackers in a forest mostly composed of pinasters 

 and stone pines. These birds were all busily engaged, 

 feeding upon the seeds contained in the cones. They were 

 not wild, but allowed of a near approach. One example 

 has occurred in Cumberland. 



Mr. E. H. Rodd, of Penzance, in an extended commu- 

 nication to myself on the birds of Cornwall, mentions that 

 one was seen on a tree on the banks of Hooe Lake by 

 Thomas Bui ted, Esq., of Belle Vue, near Plymouth. 



Dr. Edward Moore, of Plymouth, in his published Cata- 

 logue of the Birds of Devonshire, besides referring to the 

 example mentioned by Montagu, has recorded one other 

 that was shot in Devonshire, in 1829, near "Washford Pyne 

 Moor, by Mr. W. Tucker, of Dawlish. 



Rusticus, of Godalming, has lately noticed that one was 

 closely watched by a gentleman in Pepper Harrow Park, 

 .the seat of Lord Middle ton. 



Mr. Macgillivray, in his History of British Birds, says, 

 " There is a specimen in the Museum of the University of 

 Edinburgh, said to have been shot in Scotland ; another in 

 that of Mr. Arbuthnot, at Peterhead ; while the individual, 

 also killed in Scotland, from which this description was 

 taken, belongs to Mr. Thomas Henderson, Coate's Crescent, 

 Edinburgh." 



I do not find any notice of the occurrence of this bird in 

 Ireland. 



M. Vieillot says this bird appears to prefer mountainous 

 countries that are covered with firs. They are found in 

 Auvergne, Savoy, on the Alps in Switzerland, and in Aus- 

 tria, where our countryman and naturalist Willughby men- 



