PINE GROSBEAK. 
PiNICOLA ENUCLEATOR. 
Char. Male ; dark brown and ash washed with rosy carmine ; wings 
with two white bands. Female and young male have no red ; head and 
rump bronze. Length 8^ to 9 inches. 
Nest. On the border of a swamp or the margin of a stream running 
through an evergreen forest ; saddled on a low branch or in a crotch of 
a low bush, or placed in a crevice of a rock. A bulky, ill-made affair 
of moss, or twigs and roots or strips of bark, and lined with fine grass, 
roots, or vegetable fibre. 
Eggs. 4-?; pale greenish blue marked with dark brown and lilac 1 
1.05 X 0.75. 
These splendid and very hardy birds appear to dwell almost 
wholly within the cold and Arctic regions of both continents, 
whence, only in severe winters, a few migrate into Can- 
ada and the United States, where they are consequently of 
rare and uncertain occurrence. They have been seen in 
winter in the lower part of Missouri, and at the same season, 
occasionally, in the maritime parts of Massachusetts and Penn- 
sylvania, and are observed to return to Hudson Bay as early as 
April. According to Mr. Pennant, they frequent the woods of 
pine and juniper, and are now possessed of musical talents ; 
