62 
LITTLE WANDERERS. 
ter of flowers is attached in a curious way to a wing, 
and often the whole cluster, with its wing, falls together 
and is blown to some distance by the wind. When 
the lindens are in bloom you will know it by the hum- 
ming of the bees, for they are very fond of linden honey, 
and the trees often sound like an enormous beehive, 
there are so many bees about them. 
It would take altogether too long to tell about all the 
seeds that are carried by the wind, but you can find a 
great many of them without being told ; and that, after 
all, is the 
best way. 
At the bot- 
tom of this 
page are 
the seed 
pods of the 
cow pars- 
very large, 
but rather 
handsome weed, often 
found in the corners 
of pastures. You can 
see that its seed pods 
fly- 
coarse, 
