LUCKNOW CIVIL DIVISION. ASL 
“usually about the Ist June and leaving about the 1st September. 
While it stays it frequents the gardens and topes about Lucknow 
in great numbers, and is the bird referred to (I think) under 
the name of indoburmanicus in my previous paper; or is it 
pone that both these so-called species visit the district ? 
n a previous para. I have remarked on these large Paroquets, 
and will only repeat here that I believe them to be referable 
to one and the same species. 
200.—Cuculus striatus, Drap. 
The Himalayan Cuckoo visits the division during the cold 
weather. I have then frequently heard it in the suburbs of 
Lucknow, and it is an annual visitor to the Wingfield Park. 
463.—Phyllornis jerdoni, B/y. 
Jerdon’s Green Bulbul I have never seen strictly within the 
limits of the division, but it must occur, sparingly, during the cold 
weather. I say must because I have notes of its occurrence at 
Sitapore, Fyzabad and Basti, and we may therefore assume with 
certainty that it does occur, at times, within our limits. But it 
can only be considered as a rare and unfrequent visitor, though 
it may not improbably visit the division regularly during the 
hot weather, when one is not so much about. This, however, is 
hardly likely. 
485.—Pratincola insignis, Hodgs. 
This is another bird that can only be considered as a rare 
visitor, and a cold-weather one of course. I have never myself 
come across it, but Col. Marshall (I write from memory) obtained 
a specimen in the Onao District in the khadir of the Ganges, 
while it has been obtained in the Bhotan Dooars, the Nepal 
Terai and the Gorakhpur, Basti and Gonda districts. SeeS. F,, 
IX, 505. 
593.—Budytes cinereocapilla, Savi. 
The Grey Cap Field Wagtailis considered by Mr. Sharpe 
to be identical with Motacilla borealis, Sund. It is fairly 
common during the cold weather all over the division, parti- 
cularly in moist tracts along river sides. 
757.—Mirafra cantillans, Jerd. 
The Singing Bush Lark is common, but only in certain loca- 
lities. One may wander about for weeks without meeting with 
it and then suddenly come across quite a colony of these birds. 
Grass jungle about the edges of excavations and hollows, and 
generally any scrub-covered, grassy, undulating ground, are favo- 
rite haunts. This spring some four or five couple of these birds 
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