[Citizen Bird by Mabel Osgood Wright and Elliott Coues]@TWC D-Link bookCitizen Bird CHAPTER XVII 12/22
"What a beauty, too! I suppose he has a nest high up in one of these elms over the road." "Very likely, for in autumn, when the trees are bare, I have sometimes counted a dozen Orioles' nests in this very row of elms." "Look, Uncle Roy! Look over in that pasture! What are all those black and brown birds walking round after the cows, just as chickens do ?" said Dodo. "Those are members of the Blackbird family called Cowbirds, because they follow the cows as they feed, in order to pick up worms and bugs that are shaken out of the grass.
But I am sorry to say that these birds are the vagabonds of Birdland--the tramps I told you of." The Baltimore Oriole Length seven and a half inches. Male: orange flame-color, the head, neck, and upper half of back black; wings black, edged with white; tail black and orange, about half and half. Female: not clear orange and black, but the former color much duller, and the latter mixed up with gray, olive, and brown. A Summer Citizen of the United States east of the Rocky Mountains, north to Canada, travelling to Central America for the winter. A worthy Citizen, fine musician, and a good neighbor.
Belongs to the guilds of Ground Gleaners, Tree Trappers, and Seed Sowers. THE COWBIRD (THE TRAMP) "Cluck-see! cluck-see!" called a Cowbird, flying over the wall to join the others in the pasture. "What a hoarse ugly cry!" said Nat. "Yes, but not more disagreeable than the bird's habits.
I will tell you what happens every season to some poor Warbler, Sparrow, or Vireo, on account of this strange bird. "A Song Sparrow builds her nest in the grass; an egg is laid, the bird looks proudly at it, and may perhaps fly off for a few minutes. Meanwhile, peeping and spying, along comes a Cowbird.
She wants to lay an egg, too, but has no home, because she is too lazy and shiftless to build one.
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