72 BRITISH BIRDS, WITH THEIR NESTS AND EGGS. 
mere idea of offering oats to small birds, imagining that, because the seed is large, 
it is only suitable for Cardinals or other large birds: this is a curious mistake. 
In addition to the above, grass-seed, thistle, and teasle are good for a change, 
especially during the breeding and moulting seasons. 
Not being particularly fond of Redpolls in an aviary, I have never purchased 
the Mealy race; but Henry Stevenson in his ‘‘ Birds of Norfolk” (p. 229) says :— 
“Both the Mealy and Lesser Redpolls, from their tameness and engaging actions, 
are most desirable additions to the cage or aviary, but from their happy contented 
natures are liable to grow too fat, and like Ortolans, when over-fed, drop off the 
perch in a fit of apoplexy. Mr. Charles Barnard, of this city, before mentioned 
as so successful in breeding the Bramblings in confinement, had a brood of young 
Mealy Redpolls, hatched off in his aviary at Stoke, in July, 1860, a very uncommon 
circumstance with this species.” 
Of late years the judges at some of our large shows have been very unwilling 
to award prizes, in the British classes, to birds which do not breed with us; 
asserting, in support of their action, that most of these birds have not even been 
captured upon British soil; but have been imported as cage-birds direct from 
Germany. Singularly enough, they invariably waive this objection in the case of 
the Mealy Redpoll, which (though it may be in wild breeding-plumage, and by no 
means tame) usually carries off the prizes over the heads of the more soberly clad . 
though home-bred Lesser Redpoll. Such inconsistency can only be explained on 
the supposition that the life-history of the Mealy Redpoll has not been so inti- 
mately studied as it ought to be by those who have to deal with it upon the 
show-bench. 
As Gitke observes :—“‘ The breeding stations of the Mealy Redpoll lie within 
the Arctic Circle, both in the Old and New World.” Speaking of the migration 
of this species, the same author says that on the 4th and 5th November, 1847, 
“countless flocks” and “innumerable multitudes” visited Heligoland: “the whole 
island was literally covered with these birds, so that one might have thrown a 
stone in any direction one chose, and it was sure to hit birds as long as it con- 
tinued rolling along the ground.” It is during such unusual manifestations of 
feathered life, that the bird-catcher gathers in his harvest, and the markets are 
glutted throughout Europe. 
