Cambridge - Concord
Ther [Thermometer] Wednesday, Mar. 31, 1915 [March 31, 1915] Wea [Weather]
Fine
Clear, calm, warmer.
The best day for a week or
more because so nearly windless.
  Garden birds: 2 Robins attacking
7 Crow Blackbirds with excited
clamor. 2 Jays, Downy [Downy Woodpecker] heard.
  Farm birds: 2 Bluebirds (singing
gloriously at noon) Robin calling (at
eve); 3 Song Sparrows (1 sang once
at eve) Chickadee (Birch F. [Birch Field]), Creeper
(Pulpit R. [Pulpit Rock]), Partridges (5 [in a flock] started in 
Pulpit R. woods [Pulpit Rock woods], 1 in Run), Pheasants
(2 crowing) Crow, 1.
First tracks of large Deer in
Birch Field.
Ladies delights (purple) in full bloom.
Gilbert, little "Tim" & I left home
at 10 A.M. & motored to Concord
stopping at Lexington for supplies.
Tim & I had a good walk in
Birch Field & Pulpit R. woods [Pulpit Rock woods] in
mid afternoon.
Concord.
Ther [Thermometer] Thursday, April 1, 1915 Wea [Weather]
Fair
Partly cloudy, mostly sunny.
Cool with fresh N.W. [northwest] wind.
  Farm birds: Robin, 1 in full song
at sunrise, 2 calling after sunset;
Song Sparrow 2 [in full song]; Chickadee, heard;
Creeper, heard; Red-bellied Nuthatch,
1 in Cedar Park; Crows, 5 [in a flock]; Pheasant,
2 crowing at evening.
  No snow or ice in open country,
very little in woods: frost out of fields
exposed to sun; roads as dry as in
midsummer. Although most woodland
pools are wholly free from ice no 
Frogs or Hylas have been heard as 
yet the farmers tell me. Nor has
the great flight of Fox Sparrows &
Juncos arrived. Song Sparrows are
not numerous. No green grass.
  Spent most of day out of doors
directing work of men. Walked to
Birch Field & Berry Pas. [Berry Pasture] in P.M.