. The sport of bird-study; a book for young or active people . Chickadees. Feeding on the suet (p. 243).. White-breasted Nuthatch. Accepts our hospitality (p. 242). THRUSH COUSINS by the Brown Creeper while running up some trunkand hiding behind it, or else by either or both of theseKinglets. They go in small parties, sometimes thetwo species together, and often in company with theChickadees, flitting merrily from branch to branch intheir hunt for larvae, lisping away in their almostinsect-like dialect. In northern New England andCanada they build globular nests of moss, with sideentrance, sus


. The sport of bird-study; a book for young or active people . Chickadees. Feeding on the suet (p. 243).. White-breasted Nuthatch. Accepts our hospitality (p. 242). THRUSH COUSINS by the Brown Creeper while running up some trunkand hiding behind it, or else by either or both of theseKinglets. They go in small parties, sometimes thetwo species together, and often in company with theChickadees, flitting merrily from branch to branch intheir hunt for larvae, lisping away in their almostinsect-like dialect. In northern New England andCanada they build globular nests of moss, with sideentrance, suspended well out on the limbs of evergreensin the forests. Now we come to the thrushes, another of our ratherpuzzling groups, though they are not as hard to masteras the finches or warblers in that we have not nearlyso many species of them. In the Eastern and Middledistricts of the United States and Canada there are buteight species and forms to learn, and most of these areperfectly distinct, some of them very well known. Forinstance, no one can mistake the Robin or the Blue-bird—these are both thru


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Keywords: ., bookauthorjobh, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, booksubjectbirds