Page:Bird-lore Vol 03.djvu/76

 Birds and Seasons 6i Water-Thrush, t Green Heron ; 4-11, Rose-breasted Grosbeak; 5-11, Bobolink, Chestnut- sided Warbler, Prairie Warbler; 7-10, Wilson's Thrush; 7-12, Wood Thrush; 7-13, Hummingbird; 7-15, Blackburnian Warbler;t 8-11, White-eyed Vireo; 8-15, Night Hawk, Black-billed Cuckoo; 8-16, Scarlet Tanager, Black-throated Blue Warbler, t Magnolia Warbler;t 9-12, Golden-winged Warbler, Orchard Oriole;+ 9-15, Crested Fly- catcher, Lincoln's Finch, t White-crowned Sparrow, t Florida Gallinule,+ Henslow's Spar- row, + Red-eyed Vireo, Yellow-breasted Chat; 9-18, Olive-backed Thrush, f Yellow-billed Cuckoo; 10-15, Wilson's Blackcap,! Solitary Sandpiper;t 10-17, Blackpoll Warbler;t 10-20, Indigo Bunting; 13-21, Wood Pewee, Canadian Warbler;! 15-20, Bay-breasted Warbler, t-t Tennessee Warbler, t+ Cape May Warbler, tj Short-billed Marsh Wren, J Sharp- tailed Finch, J Grasshopper Sparrow;t 15-25, Gray-cheeked and Bicknell's Thrushes;t May 23 to June 3, Alder Flycatcher, t Mourning Warbler, t Olive-sided Flycatcher. t+ Departures in April and May. — April 15-25, Fox Sparrow; 20-30, Tree Sparrow; 25-30, Golden-crowned Kinglet; Red-poll, White-winged Crossbills, Shore Larks, Snowflakes; April 20 to May i, Junco, Brown Creeper, Winter Wren; May 3, Yellow-bellied Sapsucker, American Pipit; 5-10, Hermit Thrush, Herring Gull; 6, Wilson's Snipe ;+ 9, Rusty Blackbird; 10, Ruby-crowned Kinglet, Yellow Palm War- bler; 12, Blue-headed Vireo; 15, Pine Finch; 15-24, Myrtle Warbler, White-throated Sparrow; 20-23, Black-throated Blue Warbler; 20-25, Parula Warbler; 25-28, Mag- nolia Warbler, Wilson's Blackcap; 28, Gray-cheeked Thrush; 30, Canadian Warbler; May 30 to June i. Northern Water Thrush; June i, Olive-backed Thrush; 2-3, Black- poll Warbler. Note.— Red Crossbills often linger well into May; stragglers, in fact, may be seen at any time. t Migrant. See, however, June list (in June BiRD-LoREi for rare breeders. Date uncertain. APRIL AND MAY BIRD-LIFE NEAR NEW YORK CITY Kl I RANK .. CH.AF.M.W April and May are excitinti; months for the field student. Throut^hout the winter they have been anticipated with an eagerness and enthusiasm which the events that so crowd them never fail to satisfy. Time cannot pass too rapidly until the calendar marks "April i;" then we live in the assurance that each day niay bring some old friend or wi^w acquaintance. The feast of spring follows the famine of winter. From April i to about May 10, birds increase in number daily: then, as the transient visitants pass onward to more northern summer homes, they become rapidly less abundant and by June 5 we have left only the ever-present permanent residents ami the birds which have come to us from the south to nest. As the days become warmer ami the weather more settled, so do the birds return with greater regularity. The times of arrival of the earU migrants may vary several weeks, from year to year, but the birds of May come almost on a given da. Ihe date of a bird's appearance depetuls primariJN, in most instaiucs, on the nature of its food. The length of its journe, or, in other wonis, its winter range, is also to be considered here; but since that is also, to a greater or less e.xtent, determinetl by food, we may consider the ever- important (juestion of fooii as the most potent sitigle factor t:'ernin<r a bir(i time of arrival.
 * Occasionally, or not infrequently, earlier.