FAUNA AND FLORA OF NORFOLK. 
787 
extended over about two miles, and there must 
have been at least thirty or forty birds in the 
bushes, scattered about singly, not in parties. 
From all I could gather, there were nearly as 
many adults as there were immatures.” 
Mr. Clifford Borrer reports (“ British Birds,” 
Vol. IV., p. 148) that an Arctic Bluethroat 
( C . suecica) was obtained on the north coast of 
Norfolk during the third week in May, 1910. 
Red-spotted Bluethroats usually miss our coast 
during the spring northern migration, though 
some are usually reported during the return 
migration in the autumn. 
REDSTART, Black. — Individual specimens are not infrequently 
seen on the coast in the late autumn. They have 
been observed by both of us. 
Warbler, Icterine. — A female was shot at Wells, Sept. 
13th, 1911. (F. Penrose, “British Birds,” 
Vol. V., p. 188). 
Reed- Warbler, Great. — Mr. Campbell Taylor saw a large 
Reed- Warbler in the Broads district in 1912, 
“which he was satisfied was A. turdoides.” 
(Zook, May, 1913). 
WARBLER, Aquatic. — A female obtained on Blakeney golf 
course, Oct. 23rd, 1912. (C. Borrer, “British 
Birds,” Vol. VI., p. 220). 
Warbler, Yellow-browed. — On Sept. 16th, 1910, Mr. 
F. Richards identified a Yellow-browed Warbler 
on the coast. (Zook, May, 1911). 
Warbler, Barred. — Mr. E. C. Arnold saw a specimen in 
East Norfolk on Sept. 20th, 1910. Another 
specimen was obtained by Mr. F. Richards in 
the same locality on Sept. 27th, and exhibited 
at the British Ornithologists’ Club (c/. Bulk 
B.O.C., Vol. XXVII., p. 16). 
An immature female was obtained by Mr. 
G. F. Arnold at Blakeney, Sept. 3rd, 1912, and 
