64
Concord, Mass.
1913.
Aug. 26
to
Nov. 13
(No 15)

(Dendroica palmarum) Warblers near at hand but it seemed to keep apart
from them. Later in the day we found another bird which looked like
true palmarum, in the Berry Pasture. An ultra typical one, having
literally no yellowish on the under parts save on the [?], was 
met with among some little pines at the edge of an opening in
Birch Field on September 25 [September 25, 1913]. It was very tame & curious flitting
close about me sometimes within 8 or 10 feet. There was a typical
hypochrysea not far away.

36. Dendroica p. hypochrysea. In Birch Field, keeping low down
in gray birches & young white and pitch pines, I saw three or four
Yellow Palm Warblers on September 24 [September 24, 1913] and one on the 25th [September 25, 1913] while
still another was noted in the same place on October 16 [October 16, 1913].

37. Seiurus aurocapillus. - Noted only on September 3 [September 3, 1913] & 28 [September 28, 1913] - a single
bird on each occasion.

38. Seiurus noveboracensis. - On September 15 [September 15, 1913] Gilbert [Robert A. Gilbert] saw a 
Water Thrush perched on the rim of a hogshead full  of
water just behind the barn at the Farm. I
heard another chirping in Birch Field on the 25th [September 25, 1913].

39. Geothlypis agilis. - Shortly after sunset on the evening of September 30 [September 30, 1913]
I was strolling through our Berry Pasture when a Connecticut 
Warbler began chirping excitedly in a thicket near at hand,
keeping it up incessantly for at least two minutes and
uttering only the usual loud, insistent, Finch-like
whink. This note is not unlike one of the calls of G. philadelphia [Geothlypis philadelphia]
but is more metallic in quality and not to be mistaken,
I think (at least by one familiar with it), for the
utterance of any other New England frequenting bird -