GROUSE 273 
with white and more or less washed with pale rufous. L., 15°00; W., 6°50; 
T., 4°75; B. from N., *40. 
Range.—Man., s. Ont., and N. B., s. to n. parts of Minn., Wisc., Mich., 
Y., and New England. 
Nest, on the ground, sheltered by overhanging limbs. Eggs, 9-16, buffy 
or pale brownish, more or less speckled or spotted with deep brown, 1°71 x 
1:22 (Ridgw.). Date, Kentville, N. 8., June 2. 
The excessive tameness of this inhabitant of swampy, coniferous 
forests is responsible for its decrease in numbers, and it is now a rare 
bird in the United States. ‘In April and early May the males strut 
and drum somewhat after the manner of the Ruffed Grouse, the sound 
resembling the distant roll of thunder. It is usually produced when 
the cock is fluttering up an inclined tree trunk or a stump, and from this 
elevation to the ground again, or sometimes by merely springing into 
the air for several feet and fluttering to the ground’”’+(Eaton). 
1911. Harpy, M., Journ. Me. Orn. Soc., 47-49 (habits in Maine). 
300. Bonasa umbellus umbellus (Linn.). Rurrep Grousn. (Fig. 
18.) Ad. #.—Prevailing color of the upperparts rufous, much variegated 
with black, ochraceous, buffy, gray, and whitish; sides of the neck with 
large tufts of broad, glossy black feathers; tail varying from gray to rufous, 
irregularly barred and mottled with black, a broad black or brownish band 
near the end; tip gray; throat and breast ochraceous-buff, a broken blackish 
band on the breast; rest of the underparts white, tinged with buffy and 
barred with blackish or dark grayish brown, the bars indistinct on the breast 
and belly, a on the sides. Ad. ¢.—Similar, Put oink the neck tufts 
very small. L., 00; W., 7°25; T., 6°25; B. from N., 
Range.—E. uw S. from Minn., Mich., e NA Yu ae rt, s. to e. Kans., 
n. Ark., Tenn., and Va., and, in the Alleghanies, to n. Ga. 
Washington, not common P. R. Ossining, common P. R. Cambridge, 
i Je Smee very common. N. Ohio, rare P. R. Glen Ellyn, rare and 
oc: 5 
Nest, a depression lined with leaves, at the base of a stump or tree, or 
beneath brush. Eggs, 8-14, pale ochraceous-buff, 1°52 x 1°18. Date, 
Chester Co., Pa., May 5; Ossining, N. Y., May 5; Portland, Conn., May 7; 
Cambridge, May 15; se. Minn., May 3. 
Of all the characteristics of this superb game bird, its habit of 
drumming is perhaps the most remarkable. This loud tattoo begins 
with the measured thump of the big drum, then gradually changes 
and dies away in the rumble of the kettle-drum. It may be briefly rep- 
resented thus: Thump——thump——thump—thump, thump; thump, 
thump-rup rup rup rup r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r-r. The sound is produced by 
the male bird beating the air with his wings as he stands firmly braced 
on some favorite low perch, and it is now quite well known to be the 
call of the male -to the female; an announcement that he is at the old 
rendezvous—a, rendezvous that has perhaps served them for more than 
one season, and a place that in time becomes so fraught with delight- 
ful associations that even in autumn or winter the male, when he finds 
himself in the vicinity, can not resist the temptation to mount his 
-wonted perch and vent his feelings in the rolling drum-beat that was 
in springtime his song of love. But now, alas! there is no lady Grouse to 
come, shy but responsive, at the sound of his reverberating summons, 
