in little crotches or fluttered, against the 
'‘Tee to drink the sap that ran down. 
The woodpecker made short sallies after insects. 
April 9, 1905 - Thursday. 
This morning it was raining. I went over to 
6 hemlocks after some flowers. A Cooper's hawk 
*lew around scolding kek kek kek kek-kek. It was 
®ar its last years nest and never left the small 
Jtetch of woods. 
April 16, 1905 - Thursday . 
This morning before I got up I heard a ruby- 
l^wned kinglet give a song like tur her tur tur 
see . When I got up I could not find ITT 
hatched a bronzed grackle feeding in the road. 
^ dragged three or four angleworms out of a puddle 
^ iaid them in a hollow after it had collected a 
6 bunch it took them up on the grass and ate them, 
did not seem to like to pick them up very well. 
® <ii( i not seem to see me but flew at a slight 
°tion. It looked at the ground and not at its 
Urroundings, like a robin. One took a big bunch 
worms into a pine where I could not see him to 
them. One was gathering straw for a nest. 
They are a few male juncoes around feeding on 
ae lawns. 
Two robins by Kinglings are very tame. They 
^S-rdly get out of my way as I go past. One bathed 
j in a mudpudale trying three or four before it 
°hnd one deep enough to suit. 
A pril 18, 1903 - Saturday. 
morning after breakfast I started for the 
It was warm though the sky was cloudy, 
pasture the gooseberry bushes v/ere just 
_ o leaf out and ruby-crowned kinglets hunt- 
11 through them in sparing numbers. 
Heard an excited note like tsit tsit tsit-it 
hd on following- it up saw a male cowbird examining 
» n old catbird's nest. He gave the note as long as 
w &s in sight. 
, This 
T 8 blocks. 
the old 
be Sining t 
