252 



LAND BIRDS 



brush, or running swiftly across the open spaces from 

 bush to bush on the arid mountain sides, the Orcen- 

 tailcd Towhee has a manner distinctly his own. You 

 may know him by his senii-orcctilc chestnut 



'-\/ 



'*!, 



P 



crown, white throat, and green tail. 



His alarm note is a cat-like mow, lacking 

 the harshness of the note of the catbird, and 

 the insistent force of that of the spurred 

 towhee. It is a polite protest against 

 your intrusion. His song 

 has somewhat of a thrush- 

 like quality, but is more varied, possessing 

 a vigor and enthusiasm not found in that 

 of the more quiet singer. 



His nest is hidden in, or under, one of the 

 stunted bushes with which the rocky ground 

 is covered, and, brooding there day after day, 

 his olive mate is safe in her protective coloring. 

 Newly hatched Towhees are the same naked 

 nestlings, whether cuddled in a chaparral- 

 sheltered nest of the mountains or rocked in 

 a garden rosebush ; dark bluish gray in color, 

 with yellow bills, they are covered with a thin 

 whitish down. They feather rapidly, and leave 

 the nest when from ten to twelve days 

 „ , „ old, those of the warmer localities ma- 



" A manner dintinclly ' 



ivk own,;' turing somewhat sooner than those born 



on the edge of the Boreal zone. They follow the adults 

 for several weeks, learning to jump forward and kick 

 out backward, in scratching for their food, just as the 



592.1. Orkkn- 

 •iAn,Kj) Towhee. 



