The Killdeer 3 
By simply walking past the eggs, without stopping, the desired informa- 
tion can be secured. After the young birds are hatched it will be extremely 
dificu!+ to find them, by reason of their habit of squatting and remaining 
perfectly still, and also because they simulate their surroundings so perfectly. 
The student, by such field studies, can secure a great many interesting and 
valuable notes, and, if care is taken, without in the least harming either 
the old or young birds. 
The extreme watchfulness of the Killdeer at other seasons is portrayed 
by Audubon in one of his delightful descriptions of his own wanderings: 
Reader, suppose yourself wandering over some extensive prairie, far beyond 
the western shores of the Mississippi. While your wearied limbs and 
drooping spirits remind you of the necessity of repose and food, you see the 
moon’s silver rays glittering on the dews that have already clothed the tall 
grass around you. 
Your footsteps, be 
they ever so light, 
strike the ear of 
the watchful Kill- 
deer, who, with a 
velocity scarcely 
surpassed by that of 
any other bird, 
comes up, and is 
now passing and 
repassing — swiftly 
around you. His 
clear notes indicate 
his alarm, and seem 
to demand why you are there. To see him now is impossible, for a cloud 
has shrouded the moon; but on your left and right, before and behind, 
his continued vociferations intimate how glad he would be to see you depart 
from his beloved hunting-grounds. Nay, be not surprised if he should 
follow you until his eyes, meeting the glaring light of a woodsman traveler, 
he will wheel off and bid you adieu.” 
Having become acquainted with the Killdeer and its homelife, let us for 
a moment consider the relations of this bird to mankind. Unfortunately, it 
belongs to the class known as game-birds, but it is only so in name, for, 
owing to the small size of its body, it is worthless for food purposes. The 
appearance of the bird while in flight is very deceptive, its long wings mak- 
ing it appear much larger thanit really is. Its home is on the ground, and all 
of its food is obtained there and consists very largely of insects that are 
extremely destructive, such as grasshoppers, crickets and coleoptera, 
including the boll-weevil, which is now doing such great damage in the 
