Birds of the West An Account of the Lives And the Labors of Our Feathered Frien

Cover Birds of the West An Account of the Lives And the Labors of Our Feathered Frien
Birds of the West An Account of the Lives And the Labors of Our Feathered Frien
Charles E Holmes
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Every little bird has a choice of material for its home. I have never seen an Arkansas flycatcher's nest that did not have white wrapping twine in it, nor a kingbird's without cotton or BIRDS OF THE WEST 61 wool, nor a phoebe bird's without moss, and the only time that the great crested flycatcher's nests have been found without cast-off snake skins in them, they had onion peels and fish scales as substitutes.
Probably there are no more indulgent parents than chipping sparrows. They would make
...you think that they feed each other if you did not see the look of youth upon the face of the big booby bird who opens his wide mouth to receive the crumb from his little mother, and when she flies away for more, he tags on behind to be sure of getting the next morsel that she finds, and he will coax for it just as hard as a real boy will coax for a piece of bread and butter.
Every bird has a certain food which Nature has provided and in the gathering of which it has become an adept. When you first ate macaroni, you did not do it as an Italian would; you probably made a mess of it.


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