ISO 



NESTS AND EQOS OF 



■^+0 263. SPOTTED SANDFIFEB. Actitts macularia (Linn.) Geog. Dist.— North 

 and South America and West Indies. Winters chiefly south of the United States. 



The familiar little Spotted Sandpiper is an extremely abundant bird throughout 

 North America, breeding everywhere. It winters In the Southern States and be- 

 yond. Every lazy fisherman and idle school boy, who has whiled away many a 

 lalmy and hot summer day along the banks of streams, knows this bird well by the 

 bobbing and tilting movements of its body and tail, and its peculiar note, peet-weet, 

 peet-weet, as it flies up and down and across the streams. It is known by many 

 a curio\is nickname: "Teeter-tail," "Tip-up," "Sandlark," "Peet-weet" and others 

 which generally refer to some eccentricity of the bird. The eggs are creamy, buff 

 or clay color, blotched, spotted and dotted with blackish-brown; usually four in 

 number, and measure about 1.34 by .92. The nest of this Sandpiper is made on the 

 ground, generally in the shelter of high weeds or grass on a sandy island or border 

 of a cultivated meadow, near water and often at a considerable aistance from any 

 water. It is simply a depression in the soil, sometimes constructed with hay and 

 moss. The eggs like all those of the waders lay in the nests with the small ends 

 together. 



264. LOITG-BILLED CURLEW. Nume»lus longirostris Wils. Geog. Dist.— 

 Temperate North America, migrates south to Guatemala and the West Indies. 



The large Sickle-bill is of irregular distribution in temperate North America, 



♦ « E0ROPBAN Curlew, A'awfew/MJ arfu^tus. Similar In cut to the I^ung-billed Curlew. 

 ' (From Brehm). 



