Our Country's Birds And How to Know Them. a Guide to All the Birds of Great Britain

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galhda, 9 in. Golden Oriole. All yellow except wings, which are black with a yellow bar, and the central tail feathers ; black spot between bill and eye ; remiges 20 ; first primary half the length of the second.
The Golden Oriole— Dimensions, lb; Eggs, He— is too conspicuous a bird to be left in peace, although it still breeds in Cornwall every year, and is frequently reported from the eastern counties. It does not walk, but is one of our largest birds that hop, and it is^ noticeable that its
...folded wings reach to within an inch of the end of its tail. Its flight is easy and undulatory. Its call is " Ah! How d'ye do?" and its alarm is a *'khrr." The female is greener than the male, and her tail is brown, with a narrow yellow tip. The nest is a suspended one, hanging from two forking branches, and formed of interwoven bark strips and sedge leaves lined with grass flowers. There are four or five eggs.
112 THE SPECIES.
Otis. Plate xx^r. OT/DWyE.
288. tetrax, i6 in. Little Bustard. No crest ; chest striped with white and black bands.


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