. A popular handbook of the birds of the United States and Canada . mes it sounds likeUnci tsherr ^rh VA, rrh wt, then Wwee ttuee f tsher rr, alsoet se ya, ya ^ya ^ya ^ya ^ya ; the latter notes, attempted to beexpressed by whistled and contracted consonant syllables, aretrilled with this sound. Ground Robins, sometimes also called Tshe-wink and Pee-wink, from another of their notes, are general inhabitants ofCanada and the United States even to the base of the RockyMountains and the peninsula of Florida, in all of which regions,except the last, with Louisiana and the contiguous countries,they
. A popular handbook of the birds of the United States and Canada . mes it sounds likeUnci tsherr ^rh VA, rrh wt, then Wwee ttuee f tsher rr, alsoet se ya, ya ^ya ^ya ^ya ^ya ; the latter notes, attempted to beexpressed by whistled and contracted consonant syllables, aretrilled with this sound. Ground Robins, sometimes also called Tshe-wink and Pee-wink, from another of their notes, are general inhabitants ofCanada and the United States even to the base of the RockyMountains and the peninsula of Florida, in all of which regions,except the last, with Louisiana and the contiguous countries,they pass the summer and rear their young, migrating, how-ever, from the Northern and Middle States in October, andreturning again about the middle or close of April, accordingto the advancement of the season, at which time also themales usually precede the arrival of their mates. They passthe winter generally to the south of Pennsylvania, and are thenvery abundant in all the milder States in the Union. They are said to show some address at times in concealing 1 • SnoTv Bird . 2. Son^ SpsLrrow. 3. Phoebe. 4. A-merican Goldfinch 5 . Vesper Sparrow^. 6 . Towhee. tOWHEE. 3^1 their nest, which is fixed on the ground in a dry and elevatedsituation and sunk beneath the surface among the fallen leaves,sometimes under the shelter of a small bush, thicket, or to the convenience of the site, it is formed of differ-ent materials, sometimes, according to Wilson, being made ofleaves, strips of grape-vine bark, hned with fine stalks of drygrass, and occasionally in part hidden with hay or of the nests in this vicinity are made in solitary dry pinewoods without any other protection than some small bush oraccidental fallen leaves; and the external materials, rathersubstantial, are usually slightly agglutinated strips of red-cedarbark, or withered grass with a neat lining of the same andfallen pine leaves; the lining sometimes made wholly of thelatter. The nes
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, booksubjectbirds, bookyear1905