30 
The Neiv York State College of Forestry 
logical order, here I made notes concerning the Barn Swallow, 
quartering over the water ; Spotted Sandpiper, on open shore lines ; 
House Wren, singing, nesting near the buildings ; Brown Thrasher, 
nesting and singing; Catbird, singing and nesting; Cedar Wax- 
wing, active in the fruit-bearing shrubbery; Song Sparrow, sing- 
ing and nesting; Bed-eyed Vireo, singing and nesting; Indigo 
Bunting, singing; Scarlet Tanager, singing in broken canopy of 
the woods; Crow, calling on the hillsides; Bed-start, singing and 
feeding in the margins; Phoebe, active near the bridges; Least 
Flycatcher, in the bushy openings; Flicker, active in the margins; 
Blue Jay, calling along the lower woods; Maryland Yellow-throat, 
in the bushy margins ; Towhee, in bushy openings ; Chimney Swift, 
overhead; Bed-winged Blackbird, in marshy lake shores; Crested 
Flycatcher, calling and active; Downy Woodpecker, in open mar- 
gins; Goldfinch, in flight-song and feeding; Wood Thrush, in hill- 
side woodlands ; Wood Pewee, in lake-shore open woodlands ; Chip- 
ping Sparrow, nesting in camp locations; Bobin, common every- 
where; Green Heron, feeding in the lake-end marshes; Kingbird, 
nesting near the lake shores; Veery, or Wilson’s Thrush, in the 
birch swamps around the lakes; Kingfisher, active along lake 
shores ; Black and White Warbler, in broken shore margins ; Bose- 
breasted Grosbeak, singing and feeding young; Baltimore Oriole, 
nesting and feeding young; Black Duck, in the lake-end marshes; 
Bluebird, along the lake shore; Yellow Warbler, feeding; Bank 
Swallow, Clifl Swallow, Tree Swallow, flocking along the lake 
shore ; Chestnut-sided Warbler, in broken road margins ; and Broad- 
winged Hawk, in soaring flight. 
Little Long Pond. This pond lies between the Guest House 
and the others of the Kanahwauke chain of lakes (Fig. 5), along 
the southern base of Hemlock Hill, a forested ridge of rugged 
aspect rising to five hundred feet above the pond level (Fig. 11). 
The main motor road between Bear Mountain and Tuxedo runs 
along the pond shore (Fig. 10) between the pond and the moun- 
tain, making the road an excellent ground for observation of bird 
activities (Fig. 12), as the heavy woods of the hillside borders the 
road on the right and the bushy margin of the pond extends along 
