Concord.
Ther. [Thermometer] SUN. SEPT. 25, 1910 [Sunday, September 25, 1910] Wea. [Weather]
70º [70 degrees]  Fine
Clear with light S.W. [southwest] wind.
Warm & very humid. The North
east [northeast] storm that began last evening
was, like the last one, very short
for the rain ceased & the wind died
away before daybreak. Like the
last one, also, it brought a heavy
flight of migrants and the country
was flushed to day with them, chiefly
Black-polls [blackpoll warblers] of which I saw 100 or more.
  I went to Ritchie place at 10 to
meet two of the Motleys & Danny [Horner?]
They consulted him about the cost of
extensive additions to the house & barn.
I dined at the Barrett house & spent
the afternoon rambling about the farm
picking apples, etc. James saw two
fine bucks in the well field yesterday.
I walked back to Ball's Hill via
Holden's Hill, after sunset.
Concord.
Ther. [Thermometer] Mon. [MON. SEPT. 26, 1910 [Monday, September 26, 1910] Wea. [Weather]
Fine.
Sunny but partly cloudy. Oppressively
warm & humid with light S. to E. [south to east] wind.
Altogether a summer-like day. At
sunrise, & for an hour or two later, the
birds sang with a vigor & freedom rare
indeed at this season. I heard in full 
song Black Polls [blackpolls], a Pine Warbler, a Solitary
Vireo, a Song Sparrow, a Peabody Bird, a
Phoebee [Phoebe], a Flicker & a Meadow Lark.
The Black-polls were singing almost con-
tinually, in several directions, for half an hour. 
This was at Ball's Hill where I
spent the day working with James
on the door of the new canoe vault.
Pat & Harry worked at cutting, grading etc.
Connor's men did not come. Pierce
& 4 men finished "bugging" Davis Hill.
At 5 P.M. I went to Pine Park &
worked until dark pruning pines. A
Great Blue Heron passed south at 6,30.
[margin] Gilbert [Robert Alexander Gilbert] saw a very tame doe in orchard at farm. [/margin]