The OoLOGiST. 



VOL. XVIII. NO. 1. 



ALBION, N. Y., JAN., 1901. 



Whole No. 172 



The Oologist. 



A MontMy Publication Devoted to 



OOLOGY, ORNITHOLOGY AND 

 TAXIDERMY. 



FRANK H. LATTIN, Editor and Publisher, 

 ALBION, N. Y. 



Correspondence and Items of Interest to the 

 student of Birds, their Nests and Eggs, solicited 

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ENTERED AT P. O. , ALBION, N. Y. AS SECOND-CLASS MATTER. 



Nesting of the Broad-winged Hawk. 



On the 16th of May, 1895, while walk- 

 ing through a grove of oaks on the edge 

 of a marsh and within fifty yards of a 

 small stream, I frightened a hawk from 



a nest twenty feet up in the crotch of an 

 oak tree. 



I thought it was a Cooper's Hawk, al- 

 though the plaintive cry it made as it 

 perched among the branches of a tree, 

 one hundred feet away, was new to me. 

 It sounded like '^siggee,""siggee,'^ some- 

 thing like a Killdeer, a Rose-breasted 

 Grosbeak or the alarm c^y of a Red- 

 wing Blackbird. 



The cry was repeated copstantly and 

 had a somewhat ventriloquial efifeot, so 

 that it was hard to tell just where the 

 birds were, especially as they kept pret- 

 ty well out of sight and did not fly 

 around much. 



When I reached the nest I found it to 

 be about the size of a crow's, and built 

 of sticks and twigs, rather clumsily put 

 together, and lined with a few pieces of 

 bark and eight green oak leaves. It 

 only contained two eggs and still think- 

 ing the bird to be a Cooper's Hawk, I 

 left it and did not go back until the 20th, 

 when the hawk was again on th« nest. 

 As no more eggs had been laid, I took 

 the two, and on blowing found that in- 

 cubation was about one-third advanced. 

 The eggs are of a uniform dull white, 

 one blotched and spotted at the larger 

 end, and the other at the smaller end, 

 with faint lilac, which has a. clouded 

 effect as if it was under the shell. They 

 are rather small, measuring 1.87 x 1 47 

 and 193x1.53. After looking up the 

 suVject and getting the opinions of other 

 oologists, I came to the conclusion that 

 they were the eggs of Buteo latissimus. 



The following year, on May 26th, as I 

 was passing through the same piece of 

 woods, I thought I would take a look at 

 the old nest, and as I drew near a hawk 

 flew from a new one in another tree not 



