188 FIELD-NOTES FOR THE YEAR. CH. XIII. 



widgeon in the evening, as they leave the deeper 

 parts of the lake for the grassy margin, is very 

 amusing. When they first rise, and before we can 

 see them, we hear their peculiar whistle ; and they 

 almost immediately appear flying in small com- 

 panies with great swiftness to their destination. 

 This whistling sound, which they utter during their 

 flight, is quite different from their cry while swim- 

 ming and playing on the water. It requires a very 

 quick eye and a good retriever to bag many birds 

 in this twilight shooting ; but Captain Cumming, 

 alone, killed fourteen mallards and a widgeon one 

 evening while I was there. This was excellent 

 work, considering that it was only for a short time 

 during the dusk that he could shoot, that they were 

 all single shots, and that every bird had to be 

 retrieved out of water overgrown with rushes, etc. 

 The widgeon have already begun to fly in pairs. 



In the middle of February the peewits begin to 

 appear here. The exact day depends chiefly on 

 the state of the weather : the first break up of the 

 snow and ice generally brings them. About the 

 same time I hear the coo of the wood-pigeons, who 

 now come near the house for protection. This they 

 do every year as the breeding season approaches. 



Three otters are frequenting the mouth of the 

 river, apparently fishing for the flounders left in 



