r 
13 
If 1869. 
Turdus pallasi. 
Middlesex County, Mass. 
Oct. 18. 
Numerous. 
« 26 
Numbers. , 
liov. 1 . 
i Still abundant. 
1 
“ 10 . 
■ Several. 
“ 23. 
: Tv^o. 
Dee. 10 . 
Shot one in ’'Vat ertov/n, The snov/' has covered the 
ground to the depth of a foot for over a week, and the 
v^eather has been intensely cold. ’ 
1870. 
April 16, 
r 
Several. 
e. 
Seen at Nov/'tonvilie ('"aynard 1 . 
June 6 . 
Concord, t ass. Started the female from her nest 
in the side of a steep bank on the edge of a vrood path 
The locality was a sandy hill, covered with the usual 
grov/-th of-scrub oak, inhabited only by Siurus auricapil- 
oil vaceus , As tvro male Thrushes (T,pallasi) 
were standing in a hea^/y growth of oak and pine a short 
distance off, there v/as probably another r>est sonnwhere 
in the vicinity. The plumage of the female was vorv 
v^orn and faded, although the three eggs were quite fresh 
The nest^v/-as most effectually eencealed by a fallen branc. 
under which it had been built, and was very bulky inside 
composed of oak leaves with a lining of pine needles 
the interior quite neat and much smaller and shallower 
than that of .T. fuscescens . 
? 
Sept.28. 
Shot one. 
Oct. 1. 
General arrival. 
21 . 
Abundant. Svery thicket seemed filled v/ith them. 
1871, 
|| Apr. 21. 
General arrival. 
CO 
CD 
• 
Very abundant everj'-v/here. 
Nov. 3 
Still abundant. 
1873. 
Oct. 25. 
Five in our garden feeding on the berries of a bush 
honeysuckle. 
i 1874. 
Apr. 14. 
L 
Six or Savei, ir, Watertown; threo topothor all ox- 
ooodingly shy. The only note heard e-as the usual olucJc. 
