Birds of the Lydenburg District. 191 
middle of October. I met with the present species near the 
Lower Oxus, and in the undulating thinly bush-covered sand- 
wastes, as also in the densely bush-covered alluvial marly- 
clay country, never very far from water, round which they 
fly after sunset. On the Lower Syr (Jaxartes) it was rarer ; 
and here I first noticed it,—and received specimens also from 
Krasnovodsk, on the east coast of the Caspian.” 
[To be continued. | 
XIX.— Ornithological Notes made during Trips between Bloem- 
fontein and the Lydenburg Gold-fields. By ¥. A. Barratt. 
(Plate IV.) 
On my first journey I started from Kingwilliamstown in the 
Cape colony, having well stocked my light waggon with 
all the ammunition and apparatus necessary for collecting, 
not forgetting my “ Layard ;” but I did not keep any parti- 
cular record of the birds obtained in the district, and I pro- 
pose to treat in the present paper only of the birds observed 
in the northern part of the Orange Free State, from Bloem- 
fontein onwards; my notes made during sundry expeditions 
in the Transvaal Republic will also be embodied. 
Leaving the capital in the month of February, we had 
scarcely proceeded two or three miles, when we came upon 
about a dozen Stanley Cranes (Anthropoides stanleyanus) 
sporting and dancing; to their considerable astonishment I 
dropped a bullet among them, which made them stalk off 
majestically, shaking their beautiful long plumes as they went. 
About four miles further on we came to Rhinoceros Spruit, 
where large numbers of Coursers were gliding, as it were, 
in and out of the stunted herbage; whilst Plovers (Hoplopterus 
coronatus) were wheeling about in every direction, uttering 
their harsh cries. Thence we went to the Modder river; 
and in the vleys running parallel with the stream were to be 
seen the pretty Weaverbirds (Huplectes taha) bobbing up and 
down like a golden ball, and Chera progne with its gracefully 
sweeping tail. It was in the bush near the above-named river 
that I first shot the Great Spotted Cuckoo (Coccystes glan- 
oy * 

