428 THE ZOOLOGIST. 
but her mate kept to the open water. Unfortunately, the photograph | 
was not wholly successful, the depth of water and the treacherous 
nature of the bottom of the lake not allowing the camera to be 
placed far enough from the nest. Later in the season the same pair 

Hees of GREAT CRESTED GREBE (Podicipes cristatus). 
of birds laid clutches of five and four, which were not reared in 
safety. The nesting of this bird in Glamorganshire is an unusual 
occurrence, and it is peculiar to note that this abnormal clutch 
was laid in a county where the bird does not habitually breed.— 
F. Norton and J. DELHANTY (126, Queen Street, Cardiff). 
Fulmar (Fulmarus glacialis) in Suffolk—On October 10th, while 
walking along the beach at Pakefield, just south of Lowestoft, I 
found a Fulmar on the shore, exhausted but still alive. It is one of 
the light-coloured form, and probably a bird of the year. The Fulmar 
is by no means a common visitor to Hast Anglia. Mr. Patterson 
records one in this Journal (Zool. 1907, p. 388), also found near 
Lowestoft, but in this case a dead bird. —Junian G. Tuck (Tostock 
Rectory, Bury St. Edmunds). 
Birds and Butterflies in the Alpes-Maritimes.—On the early hot 
days of September, 1911, Papelio podalurius was frequently seen 
