The Birds of Ontario: Being a Concise Account of Every Species of Bird Known to Have Been Found in Ontario, with a Description of Their Nests and Eggs, and Instructions for Collecting Birds and Preparing and Preserving Skins, Also Directions how to Form a Collection of EggsW. Briggs, 1894 - 426 pages |
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Page 11
... seen during each outing . Various shapes and sizes of books ruled in various ways have been suggested for this purpose , but for a beginner I would recommend a plain page on which to enter notes of the birds seen at such a place on such ...
... seen during each outing . Various shapes and sizes of books ruled in various ways have been suggested for this purpose , but for a beginner I would recommend a plain page on which to enter notes of the birds seen at such a place on such ...
Page 13
... seen when we remember that the bulk of our birds are born in the north , and are called upon to provide for the coming winter at an age when they are without personal experience of any kind . That all birds migrate in flocks is ...
... seen when we remember that the bulk of our birds are born in the north , and are called upon to provide for the coming winter at an age when they are without personal experience of any kind . That all birds migrate in flocks is ...
Page 34
... seen . The one in my collection was procured out on Lake Ontario at midsummer , having for some reason failed to follow the flocks to the far north . In the fall very few are seen , their route to the south being in some other direction ...
... seen . The one in my collection was procured out on Lake Ontario at midsummer , having for some reason failed to follow the flocks to the far north . In the fall very few are seen , their route to the south being in some other direction ...
Page 37
... seen in rows in the evening , giving a chance to some local Scotch " wut " to christen them the " Mochrum Elders , " a name which , in that district , has clung to them ever since . SUBFAMILY PHALERINE . GENUS CEPPHUS PALLAS . CEPPHUS ...
... seen in rows in the evening , giving a chance to some local Scotch " wut " to christen them the " Mochrum Elders , " a name which , in that district , has clung to them ever since . SUBFAMILY PHALERINE . GENUS CEPPHUS PALLAS . CEPPHUS ...
Page 40
... seen in company with the large gulls , which spend a short time during the fall around the west end of Lake Ontario , following the fishing boats and picking up the loose fish that are shaken out of the nets . It is spoken of by the ...
... seen in company with the large gulls , which spend a short time during the fall around the west end of Lake Ontario , following the fishing boats and picking up the loose fish that are shaken out of the nets . It is spoken of by the ...
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Common terms and phrases
abundant Adult Alaska Arctic ashy barred Barred Owl belly blackish blotched breast bush Central America chestnut coast color common composed Coues crissum crown ducks Dunnville dusky edged Eggs female flocks found breeding four frequently GENUS GMEL grass gray ground HAB.-Eastern North America HAB.-Eastern United HAB.-North America HAB.-Northern habits Hamilton Bay Hawk heard Hudson's Bay inches Lake Lake Ontario Length LINN List of Birds Macoun male mandible Manitoba marked marsh middle toe migration Mourning Warbler Nelson says Nest North America North-West northern Northern United northward numbers observed outer pair pale paler patch places plumage pure white quills rare reddish-brown River rump season seen shade shores sides south in winter Southern Ontario Sparrow species specimen speckled spotted spring and fall streaked SUBGENUS summer resident tail feathers tarsus throat throughout Ontario tinged tipped tree twigs usually Warbler West Indies whitish wing coverts wings and tail yellow yellowish Yukon
Popular passages
Page 387 - Then from a neighboring thicket the mockingbird, wildest of singers, Swinging aloft on a willow spray that hung o'er the water, Shook from his little throat such floods of delirious music, That the whole air and the woods and the waves seemed silent to listen...
Page 144 - As we draw near the mother sees us, and nestles closer still over her treasures, quite hiding them in the covering of her breast, and watches us with timid eyes, all anxiety for the safety of what is dearer to her than her own life. Her mate stands motionless, but not unmoved, hard by, not venturing even to chirp the note of encouragement and sympathy she loves to hear. Alas! hope fades and dies out, leaving only fear; there is no further concealment — we are almost upon the nest — almost trodden...
Page 387 - ... the tones and sad; then soaring to madness Seemed they to follow or guide the revel of frenzied Bacchantes. Single notes were then heard, in sorrowful, low lamentation; Till, having gathered them all, he flung them abroad in derision, As when, after a storm, a gust of wind through the tree-tops Shakes down the rattling rain in a crystal shower on the branches.
Page 204 - Though really strong and sufficiently fierce birds, they lack the "snap* of the Falcons and Asturs; and I scarcely think they are smart enough to catch birds very often. I saw one make the attempt on a Lark Bunting. The Hawk poised in the air, at a height of about twenty yards, for fully a minute, fell heavily, with an awkward thrust of the talons — and missed. The little bird slipped off, badly scared no doubt, but unhurt, while the enemy flapped away sulkily, very likely to -i around a gopher-hole...
Page 131 - Wilson's Snipe. Crown, black, with a pale middle stripe; back, varied with black, bright bay and tawny, the latter forming two lengthwise stripes on the scapulars; neck and breast, speckled with brown and dusky; lining of wings, barred with black and white; tail, usually of sixteen feathers, barred with black, white and chestnut; sides, waved with dusky; belly, dull white; quills, blackish, the outer white-edged. Length, about 10.50-11.50; wing, 5.00-5.60; tail, 2.60; bill, 2.502.70. RANGE. — America;...
Page 143 - Fogs hang low and heavy over rock-girdled Labrador. Angry waves, palled with rage, exhaust themselves to encroach upon the stern shores, and baffled, sink back howling into the depths. Winds shriek as they course from crag to crag in mad career, till the humble mosses that clothe the rocks crouch lower still in fear.
Page 413 - And millions of warblers, that charmed us before, Have fled in the train of the sun-seeking swallow; The Blue-bird, forsaken, yet true to his home, Still lingers, and looks for a milder to-morrow, Till forced by the horrors of winter to roam, He sings his adieu in a lone note of sorrow.
Page 291 - ... a bird of distinguished appearance, whose very name suggests the far-away land of the dipping sun, and the tuneful romance which the wild bird throws around the fading light of day; clothed in striking color-contrasts of black, white and gold, he seems to represent the allegory of diurnal transmutation; for his sable pinions close around the brightness of his vesture, as night encompasses the golden hues of sunset, while the clear white space enfolded in these tints foretells the dawn of the...
Page 326 - Plains, accidentally to Utah, north to the British Provinces, including Newfoundland and Labrador. Breeds from the Northern States northward, and winters in the Middle States and southward.
Page 34 - Loon. Adult. — Blackish; below, white; dark along the sides and on the vent and crissum; most of the head and fore neck, bluish-gray; the throat with a large chestnut patch; hind neck, sharply streaked with white on a blackish ground; bill, black. (Wheaton.) Immature. — Lacking the markings on the head and neck; the back marked with round or oval spots. Length, 18.00-27.00; wings, 10.00-11.50; bill, 2.25.