140 
THE REDDISH EGRET. 
ones enough to load your schooner. I can take you straight to their breed- 
ing-place.” 
You may suppose, reader, how my spirits were raised by this intelligence, 
and how surprised I was that Peale’s Egret was not in the number of the 
Florida Herons. We speedily embarked in Mr. Thurston’s boat, spread 
our sails to the breeze, and passed several keys, on which we procured two 
young birds of the large white species, which I saw at once was unknown 
to me. As we approached the next island, I saw twenty or thirty pairs of 
Herons, some of which were pure white, others of a light blue colour, but 
so much larger than the Blue Heron, Ardea ccerulea , that I asked the pilot 
what they were, when he answered, “ the very fellows I want to shew you, 
and you may soon see them close enough, as you and I will shoot a few by 
way of amusement.” Before half an hour had elapsed, more than a dozen 
were lying at my feet. Some of them were as white as driven snow, the 
rest of a delicate purplish tint, inclining to grey on the back and wings, 
with heads and necks of a curious reddish colour. Males and females there 
were, but they were all of one species, for my companion assured me that 
“ this sort bred before they turned to their natural colours,” by which he 
meant before attaining their full plumage at the age of three years. Well, 
the immature birds were the very same as the individual to which, as the 
representative of a new species, the name of Peale’s Egret had been given. 
This I saw at once, for so good is the representation of it in the fourth 
volume of Bonaparte’s American Ornithology, that from the mere recol- 
lection of it I was enabled to recognise the bird at once. You may imagine 
the pleasure I felt, as well as that which I experienced on becoming better 
acquainted with this species, which I found in many places both with eggs 
and with young. 
The Reddish Egret is a constant resident on the Florida Keys, to which 
it is so partial at all seasons that it never leaves them. Some individuals are 
seen as far east as Cape Florida, and westward along the Gulf of Mexico. 
Whether it may ever betake itself to fresh water I cannot say, but I never 
found one in such a situation. It is a more plump bird for its size than most- 
other Herons, and in this respect resembles the Night Heron and the Yellow- 
crowned species, but possesses all the gracefulness of the tribe to which it 
belongs. In walking it lifts its feet high, and proceeds at a quiet pace, but 
sometimes briskly ; it alights with ease on trees, and walks well on the 
larger branches. It rarely feeds from the edges of the water, but resorts to 
the shallows of the extensive mud or sand flats, so numerous about the keys. 
There, twenty or thirty, sometimes as many as a hundred, may be seen 
wading up to the heel (or knee-joint as it is usually called) in pursuit of 
prey, or standing in silence awaiting the approach of an animal on which it 
