THE (i HEAT HONEY GUIDE. 423 



Mr. Yarrell, however, seems to hold rather an opposite opinion, and says that "the Wry- 

 neck is rather solitary in its habits, being very seldom seen associating with, or even near, any 

 other bird than its own single partner, and that too but for a very limited portion of the 

 year." 



In captivity, the Wryneck is tolerably docile : and when taken young can be perfectly 

 tamed. In some countries it is the fashion to tie a string to the ley of a tame Wryneck and 

 take it out for daily exercise for food, letting it run up the trees or on the ground in search of 

 insects. The little bird soon becomes accustomed to this kind of life, and when the string is 

 pulled returns to its owner, and runs about his clothes until he gives it permission to take 

 another excursion. 



The nest of the Wryneck is hardly deserving of that name, being merely composed of 

 chips of decaying wood. The eggs are laid in the hollow of a, tree, not wholly excavated by 

 the bird, as is the case of the woodpeckers, its beak not being sufficiently strong for such a 

 task, but adapted to the purpose from some already existing hole. 



From a letter of a correspondent to Mr. Yarrell, it seems that although the Wryneck 

 makes no nest, it does not hesitate in appropriating the deserted home of any other bird which 

 it may find in the hollow which it selects for nidification. The bird had chosen a hole in 

 an old apple-tree for that purpose, and the eggs were laid upon a mass of hair, moss, and 

 fibrous roots, evidently a deserted nest of a redstart. The pertinacity with winch the Wry- 

 neck adhered to the tree was really extraordinary, for she suffered her nest to be disturbed and 

 replaced five times, and to be robbed four times of her eiri/s before she would finally leave the 

 spot. The number of eggs laid by the Wryneck is rather great, as many as ten having often 

 been found in a single nest. In the instance just mentioned, no less than twenty-two eggs 

 were taken at the four intervals. Their color is beautiful white with a pinky tinge, not unlike 

 those of the kingfisher ; and as this pink color is produced by the yolk showing itself through 

 the delicate shell, it is, of course, lest when the egg is emptied of its contents. The plumage 

 of this little bird, although devoid of brilliant hues, and decked only with brown, black, and 

 gray, is really handsome from the manner in which those apparently sombre tints are dis- 

 posed. In Yarrell' s book on birds the markings cf the Wryneck are given so concisely that 

 they cannot be altered without damage. "The top of the head grayish-brown, barred across 

 with streaks of darker brown and white ; neck, back, rump, ami upper tail-coverts gray, 

 speckled with brown. From the occiput {i.e. back of the head) down the middle line of the back 

 of the neck and between the scapularies, is a streak of dark brown mixed with black ; the wings 

 brown, speckled with lighter yellow-brown, and a few white spots ; the primary <p nil -feathers 

 barred alternately with vale yellow, brown, and black; the tertials on the upper surface 

 marked with a descending line of black : upper surface of the tail-feathers mottled with gray 

 and brown, and marked with four irregularly transverse bars of black; chin, throat, ear- 

 coverts, and neck, in front, pale yellow-brown with narrow transverse black lines ; breast, belly, 

 sides, and under tail-coverts, dull white tinged with yellow-brown, and spotted with black ; 

 under surface of tail-feathers pale grayish-brown, speckled and barred with black ; legs, toes, 

 and claws brown." The total length of the adult male bird is about seven inches, and the 



CUCKOOS. 



The Cuckoos constitute a large family, containing several smaller groups, and many 

 species. Representatives of the groups will be found in the following pages. All these birds 

 have a rather long, slender, and somewhat curved beak, which in some species takes a curve 

 so decided, that it gives quite a predaceous air to its owner. Examples of the Cuckoo tribe 

 are to be found in almost every portion of the globe, and are most plentiful about the tropics. 



The first group is that of which the celebrated Great Honey Guide is our typical 

 example. The Honey Guides derive their name from the fact that they are extremely fond of 

 wild bees and their honey, and by their eager cries attract keen-eared and sharp-eyed hunters 



