4 FIELD ORNITHOLOGY. 
service in securing the parent of eggs that might otherwise remain unidentified. I have no 
practical knowledge of bird-lime ; I believe it is seldom used in this country. A method of 
netting birds alive, which I have tried, is both easy and successful. A net of fine green silk, 
some 8 or 10 feet square, is stretched perpendicularly across a narrow part of one of the tiny 
brooks, overgrown with briers and shrubbery, that intersect many of our meadows. Retreating 
to a distance, the collector beats along the shrubbery making all the noise he can, urging on 
the little birds till they reach the almost invisible net and become entangled in trying to fly 
through. I have in this manner taken a dozen sparrows and the like at one ‘‘drive.” But 
the gun can rarely be laid aside for this or any similar device. 
Ammunition. — The best powder is that combining strength and cleanliness in the highest 
compatible degree. In some brands too much of the latter is sacrificed to the former. Other 
things being equal, a rather coarse powder is preferable, since its slower action tends to throw 
shot closer. Some numbers are said to be ‘‘too quick” for fine breech-loaders. Inexperienced 
sportsmen and collectors almost invariably use too coarse shot. When unnecessarily large, two 
evils result: the number of pellets in a load is decreased, the chances of killing being corre- 
spondingly lessened; and the plumage is unnecessarily injured, either by direct mntilation, 
or by subsequent bleeding through large holes. As already hinted, shot cannot be too fine for 
your routine collecting. . Use ‘‘ mustard-seed,” or “‘ dust-shot,” as it is variously called; it is 
smaller than any of the sizes usually numbered. As the very finest can only be procured in 
cities, provide yourself liberally on leaving any centre of civilization for even a country village, 
to say nothing of remote regions. A small bird that would have been torn to pieces by a few 
large pellets, may be riddled with mustard-seed and yet be preservable ; moreover, there is, as 
a rule, little or no bleeding from such minute holes, which close up by the elasticity of the 
tissues involved. It is astonishing what large birds may be brought down with the tiny pellets. 
I have killed hawks with such shot, knocked over a wood ibis at forty yards and once shot 
a wolf dead with No. 10, though I am bound to say the animal was within a few feet of me. 
After dust-shot, and the nearest number or two, No. 8 or 7 will be found most useful. Water- 
fowl, thick-skinned sea-birds, like loons, cormorants, and pelicans, and a few of the largest land 
birds, require heavier shot. I have had no experience with the substitution of fine gravel or 
sand, much less water, asa projectile; besides shot I never fired anything at a bird except 
my ramrod, on one or two occasions, when J never afterwards saw either the bird or the stick. 
The comparatively trivial matter of caps will repay attention. Breech-loaders not discharged 
with a pin take a particular style of short cap called a “‘ primer;” for other guns the best 
water-proof lined caps will prevent annoyance and disappointment in wet weather, and may 
save you an eye, for they only split when exploded ; whereas, the flimsy cheap ones — that 
“G D” trash, for instance, sold in the corner grocery at ten cents a hundred — usually fly 
to pieces. Cut felt wads are the only suitable article. Ely’s ‘‘ chemically prepared ” wadding 
is the best. It is well, when using plain wads, occasionally to drive a greased one through 
the barrel. Since you may sometimes run out of wads through an unexpected contingency, 
always keep a wad-cutter to fit your gun. You can make serviceable wads of pasteboard, but 
they are inferior to felt. Cut them on the flat sawn end of a stick of firewood: the side of a 
plank does not do very well. Use a wooden mallet, instead of a hammer or hatchet, and so 
save your cutter. Soft paper is next best after wads; I have never used rags, cotton or tow, 
fearing these tinder-like substances might leave a spark in the barrels. Crumbled leaves or 
grass will answer at a pinch. I have occasionally, in a desperate hurry, loaded and killed 
without any wadding. 
Other Equipments. —(a.) For the Gun. A gun-case will come cheap in the end, 
especially if you travel much. The usual box, divided into compartments, and well lined, 
