  Wea. [Weather] Mon. [Monday] March 24, 1902  Ther. [Thermometer]
  A.M. clear; P.M. partly cloudy.
Wind N.E. [Northeast]
  Left the farm house at 7.15 & walked
to Ball's Hill. Hardly any birds seen
or heard save 2 Hairy Woodpeckers [in a flock] & several
Red-wings by the river. As we were
rowing across 11 Black Ducks [in a flock] passed
over high in air.
  Reached Cambridge at 9 A.M. &
spent day in museum writing on Lower
Cala. Rep. [Lower California Report].

  Wea. [Weather] Tuesday 25 [March 25, 1902] Ther. [Thermometer]
34 [degrees]
46 [degrees]
  Clear with light E. [East] wind.
  Spent the greater part of day
in museum working on Lower Cala. [Lower California]
report. Mr. Farley, Dr. Mark
& Richard Eustis called in P.M.
Went to early service at
St. Johns with C. [Caroline]

  Cambridge - Wolfeboro, N.H.[New Hampshire]
  Wea. [Weather] Wed. [Wednesday] March 26, 1902 Ther. [Thermometer]
29 [degrees]
46 [degrees]
  Brilliantly clear. Light E. [East] wind.
  Hepaticas in full bloom in the Garden.
Grass on some of the lawns six inches
long & almost ready to be cut.
  To St. Johns with C. [Caroline] at 8.30.
Spent A.M. writing. Went to
Mus Comp. Zool. [Museum of Comparative Zoology] in P.M. walking
back. John T. Nichols, young Bowditch
& Walter Deane dined with us & spent 
the evening.

  Wea. [Weather] Thursday 27 [March 27, 1902] Ther. [Thermometer]
  A.M. clear. P.M. partly cloudy.
  Left Boston for Wolfeboro at 8.30.
Leander joined me at South Lawrence.
Saw no snow anywhere but ponds still
frozen over north of Milton N.H. [New Hampshire]
Dined at hotel at Wolfeboro &
spent night at Prof. Lords. Visited
all the class rooms & drove with
Leander to the farm to see Nat & family.
Country bare & brown No snow cover on
mountains. Roads dry & dusty in places.
Everyone says it is an unprecedentedly
early spring here.