The Evening Grosbeak in Humboldt County, California
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It was on May 7, 1911, early in the forenoon; the day was dark and cloudy, with occasional heavy showers to break the monotony. I was passing through a spruce grove on the very edge of the bay, some six miles east of Eureka. While listening to the scratching of a towhee, my attention was called to the unmistakable call note of the Evening Grosbeak. It was faint, owing to the distance and the rustling of branches.
Traveling in the direction of the call, I soon came under several tall pines, in which were a number of the Evening Grosbeaks: such a busy lot I had never before seen. They were first hanging to a cone, then hidden in a sort of mistletoe, from which they invariably flew to a nearby branch. There they paused a second and again resumed a position on the cone or within reaching distance of it. This seemed to be their chief attraction.
One flew out in the open air, then circled and lit on a branch not over twenty feet from where I was standing. He seemed to be looking at me, and sat very still for a few moments, then got busy as any of the others, seemingly satisfied with what he had seen. There were upwards of twenty feeding in the tops of the nearby trees.
I secured two specimens, a male and female. They proved to be the Western Evening Grosbeak (Hesperiphona vespertina montana).
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Recommended Citation
Clay, C. I.
(1912)
"The Evening Grosbeak in Humboldt County, California,"
Condor: Vol. 14
:
Iss.
2
, Article 10.
Available at:
https://digitalcommons.usf.edu/condor/vol14/iss2/10