recent high waters, as a fortnight previously the river had 
been at freshet pitch. A Rail note was heard from the 
Club Camp by the men who spent Friday night there, which 
was thought to have been the note of the Yellow Rail, and 
a Rail was heard by the Saturday morning party, which 
was probably a Sora, but as the identifications were not 
complete, these names do not appear on the official list. 
It was rather peculiar to find that no one had observed 
or heard a Pine Warbler, but, as its absence was recorded 
in 1918, 1919 and 1920, it may be that this species is not as 
common as formerly. The Warbling Vireo, which had not 
been recorded up to five-thirty Sunday afternoon, was seen 
and heard in the same group of trees in the town of Ipswich 
in which a bird of this species has been found on many* 
previous trips. 
The following species were recorded: 
Red-throated Loon 
Black-bellied Plover 
Herring Gull 
Semi-palmated Plover 
Common Tern 
Piping Plover 
Double-crested Cormorant 
Ruddy Turnstone 
Red-breasted Merganser 
Ruffed Grouse 
Black Duck 
Ring-necked Pheasant 
Wood Duck 
Mourning Dove 
Old-squaw 
Marsh Hawk 
Bittern 
Sharp-shinned Hawk 
Great Blue Heron 
Red-shouldered Hawk 
Black-crowned Night Heron 
Broad-winged Hawk 
Woodcock 
Sparrow Hawk 
Wilson's Snipe 
Osprey 
Dowitcher 
Yellow-billed Cuckoo 
Knot 
Black-billed Cuckoo 
White-rumped Sandpiper 
Belted Kingfisher 
Least Sandpiper 
Hairy Woodpecker 
Semi-palmated Sandpiper 
Downy Woodpecker 
Sanderling 
Northern Flicker 
Greater Yellow-legs 
Whip-poor-will 
Solitary Sandpiper 
Night Hawk 
Upland Plover 
Chimney Swift 
Spotted Sandpiper 
Ruby-throated Hummingbird 
