Green, Greenish Garay, Olive, and Yellowish Olive Birds 



Examine the spot more carefully, and on one side you find an 

 opening, and within the ball of earth, softly lined with grass, lie 

 four or five cream-white, speckled eggs. It is only by a happy 

 accident that this nest of the ovenbird is discovered. The con- 

 cealment could not be better. It is this peculiarity of nest con- 

 struction in shape like a Dutch oven that has given the bird 

 what DeKay considers its "trivial name." Not far from the nest 

 the parent birds scratch about in the leaves like diminutive barn- 

 yard fowls, for the grubs and insects hiding under them. But at 

 the first suspicion of an intruder their alarm becomes pitiful. 

 Panic-stricken, they become fairly limp with fear, and drooping 

 her wings and tail, the mother-bird drags herself hither and 

 thither over the ground. 



As utterly bewildered as his mate, the male darts, flies, and 

 tumbles about through the low branches, jerking and wagging 

 his tail in nervous spasms until you have beaten a double-quick 

 retreat. 



In nesting time, at evening, a very few have heard the "lux- 

 urious nuptial song" of the ovenbird; but it is a song to haunt 

 the memory forever afterward. Burroughs appears to be the 

 first writer to record this "rare bit of bird melody." "Mounting 

 by easy flight to the top of the tallest tree," says the author of 

 " Wake- Robin," "the ovenbird launches into the air with a sort 

 of suspended, hovering flight, like certain of the finches, and 

 bursts into a perfect ecstasy of song clear, ringing, copious, 

 rivalling the goldfinch's in vivacity and the linnet's in melody." 



Worm-eating Warbler 



(Helmmtlerus vermivorus) Wood Warbler family 



Length 5.50 inches. Less than an inch shorter than the English 



sparrow. 

 Male and Female Greenish olive above. Head yellowish brown, 



with two black stripes through crown to the nape; also 



black lines from the eyes to neck. Under parts buffy and 



white. 

 Range Eastern parts of United States. Nests as far north as 



southern Illinois and southern Connecticut. Winters in the 



Gulf States and southward. 

 Migrations May. September. Summer resident. 



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