3 
Frogs and 
Toads 
Migrants 
nearly all 
gone 
As we were eating supper by the canoes, a bird 
which looked like a Quail but flew like a Woodcock shot over¬ 
head and alighted among some bricks on the hillside. Just 
as we pushed off from the land, a Whippoorwill began singing. 
We heard two others below Heath’s bridge. Our progress home¬ 
ward was swift and easy for we sailed nearly the entire way 
before a strong steady wind. After night fell there was a 
truly deafening clamor of Batra.chians, chiefly Toads, Hylas, 
and Tree Toads, with a good many Leopard Frogs and now and 
then a Bull Frog. Saw very few migrants to-day, in fact 
nothing save Black-polls, which were not numerous, and a 
male Canadian Warbler under the pines near Martha’s Point 
where we lunchedTl 
J3 
