210 CEDAR WAXWIXG. 



They liave long since abandoned tlieir haljit of building in 



hollow trees, and now nest only about houses or in lawns 



where gourds or boxes are erected for 



Vmvle Martin, ^^^^j^. occupation. To these they return 



year after year, arriving in the spring 



about April 25 and remaining until September. The 



male is uniform steel-l)lue, and appears black in the air ; 



the female is grayish, tinged with steel-bhie above ; tlie 



breast is gray, the belly white. This is the largest of 



our Swallows, measuring eight inches in length. 



Waxwings. (Family Ampelid^.) 



One of the two sj^ecies of Waxwing is a bird of the far 

 ISTorth ; the other, our Cedar Waxwing, is found through- 

 Cedar Waxwing, out North America. Waxwings pos- 

 Ampdis mirorum. scss ia an unusual degree two charac- 

 Piate L^ II. teristics which are not supposed to lie 



associated — sociability and silence. None of our birds is 

 more companionable, none more quiet. In their fondness 

 for one another's society they seem to delay the pairing 

 season, and long after other birds have gone to house- 

 keeping they are still roving al)0ut in flocks. Finallj^, 

 late in June, they settle down and build a nest of generous 

 proportions, often in some fruit tree, about ten feet from 

 the ground. The three to five eggs are pale bluish gray 

 or putty-color, spotted with black or brownish black. 



Waxwings fly in close rank and alight as near each 

 other as the nature of their perch -will allow. They sit 

 very still, like little Parrots or Doves, l)ut often raise and 

 lower their crests, and perhaps whisper a fine lisping note, 

 which is prolonged into a louder call — a string of beady 

 notes — as they take wing. 



Tlieir fare varies with the season — cedar berries, sti-aw- 

 berries, cherries, both cultivated and wild, the berries 



