Wea. [Weather] WED. [Wednesday] March 28, 1900 Ther. [Thermometer]
32 [degrees]
46[degrees]
  Clear with strong N.W. [North West] wind.
  Spent the day in the Museum
taking several rambles about the
garden and walking up Sparks St.
to Hanson Avenue.
Wea. [Weather] THURSDAY March 29, 1900 Ther. [Thermometer]
33 [degrees] 
44 [degrees]
  Brilliantly clear with strong
N.W. [North West] wind.
  Took a number of photographs
in the garden to test my new
4 X 5 cameras the Ray, Reflix
& long focus Pre[?][?]s. Also photographed
the [male] & [female] Downy Woodpeckers on the
suet by the Museum window.
Leon C. H[?]le[?][?][?] & Outram Bangs called
in P.M.
Wea. [Weather] FRI. [Friday] MARCH 30, 1900 Ther. [Thermometer]
29 [degrees] 
44 [degrees]
  A.M. clear, dead calm & very
warm. East wind in P.M. with gathering
clouds.
  Walked up Highland St. at 10 A.M. On
reaching Mr. Smith's I found about 8 or 10
Crow Blackbirds flying to & fro among the pines
singing & calling. A Song Sparrow was singing
brokenly under these trees. A Robin was
running about on the Gehring's lawn, & a [male]
Sitta Canadensis pecking at a stump in our
[?] over the street. Spent the rest
of the day reading & working in Museum.
Wea. [Weather] SATURDAY March 31, 1900 Ther. [Thermometer]
34 [degrees]
43 [degrees]
  Cloudy with a light dust
of snow in early morning.
  Parus atricapillus 1 in garden
  Dryobates pubescens [female] at suet.
  C. E. R. S & Walter went to Jaffrey
for the day prospecting for [?]
quarters but finding nothing satisfactory.
I spent the day in the Museum.
Fred B. McKechnie called in P.M.