<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<h1>BIRDS AND ALL NATURE.</h1>
<div class="vlouter">
<div class="volumeline">
<div class="volumeleft"><span class="sc">Vol. V.</span></div>
<div class="volumeright"><span class="sc">No. 5.</span></div>
<div class="ac">MAY, 1899.</div>
</div></div>
<h2><SPAN name="THE_CEDAR_WAXWING" id="THE_CEDAR_WAXWING"></SPAN>THE CEDAR WAXWING.<br/> <span class="xx-smaller"><span style="font-weight:lighter;"> (<i>Ampelis cedrorum.</i>)</span></span></h2>
<p class="ac">LYNDS JONES.</p>
<p>THERE is no more beautiful bird
in our northern states, if there
be in the whole country, than
our waxwing. Many birds are
more gorgeously appareled, and with
many there are more striking contrasts
exhibited, but nowhere do we encounter
a texture more delicate covering a
bearing more courtly. One despairs of
adequately describing the silky softness
of the plumage and the beautiful
shades of color. But the perfecting of
color photography has made that task
unnecessary. We may wonder why
some crested birds have this regal insignia
bestowed upon them by nature,
but it would be impossible to think of
the waxwing without his crowning
glory. Not less characteristic are the
horny appendages resembling red sealing
wax attached to the secondary wing
feathers and sometimes also to the tail
feathers. They seem to be outgrowths
of the tip of the shaft. These, with the
yellow-tipped tail, form the only bright
colors in the plumage.</p>
<p>The cedar waxwings are gregarious,
except during the breeding-season, wandering
about the country in flocks of a
dozen individuals, more or less, stopping
for any considerable time only
where food is plentiful. Their wandering
propensities make their presence a
very uncertain quantity at any season
of the year. During the whole of 1898
they were present in considerable numbers
at Oberlin, Ohio, nesting in orchards
and shade trees plentifully, but
thus far in 1899 very few have been
seen. No doubt their presence is not
suspected even when they may be numerous,
because they do not herald
their appearance with a loud voice nor
with whistling wing. Their voice accords
perfectly with their attire, their
manners are quiet and unassuming, and
their flight is well-nigh noiseless. One
moment the flock is vaulting through
the air in short bounds, the next its
members are perched in a treetop with
erected crests at attention. If all is
quiet without cause for suspicion, the
flock begins feeding upon the insect
pests, if they are in season; upon the
fruit, if that is in season. So compact
is the flock, both in flight and while
resting, that nearly every member
might be taken at a single shot. The
birds are so unsuspicious that they can
easily be approached, thus presenting
a tempting prize to the small hunter
who may design the beautiful plumage
for some hat decoration.</p>
<p>In common with the goldfinch, the
waxwings are late breeders, making
their nests in June, July, and August.
They seem to prefer rather small trees
and low ones, nesting in orchard trees
and in ornamental shrubbery as well as
in shade trees. The nest is not usually
an elaborate affair, but rather loosely
made of twigs, grass, rootlets, and
leaves, often lined with grape-vine
bark, thus hinting that the species has
sprung from an original tropical stock,
which necessarily makes its nest as cool
and airy as practicable. The eggs are
unique among the smaller ones, in their
steely bluish-gray ground, rather evenly
overlaid with dots and scratches of
dark brown or black, thus presenting
an aggressiveness out of all harmony
with the birds. But the peculiar colors
and pattern aid greatly in rendering
the eggs inconspicuous in the nest, as
anyone may prove by noticing them as
they lie on their bed of rootlets or
leaves. They are usually four in number
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[Pg 194]</SPAN></span>
in this locality, but may vary somewhat
according to the season and individual
characteristics.</p>
<p>The food of the waxwing is varied
both according to season and other
conditions. Wild fruit, berries, and
seeds form much of their food during
the fall and winter months. Mr. A. W.
Butler states that, "in winter nothing
attracts them so much as the hack-berry
(<i>Celtis occidentalis</i>). Some years,
early in spring, they are found living
upon red buds." The investigations of
the food of this species by Professor F.
E. L. Beal prove that the greater share
of it consists of wild fruit or seeds with
a very small allowance of cultivated
fruits. Animal matter forms a relatively
small proportion of the food, but
this small proportion by no means indicates
the insect-feeding habits of the
birds. It might well be suspected that
so varied a diet would enable the birds
to accommodate themselves to almost
any conditions, largely feeding upon
the food which happens to be the
most abundant at the time. Thus, an
outbreak of any insect pest calls the
waxwings in large flocks which destroy
great numbers to the almost entire
exclusion of fruit as a diet for the
time. It cannot be denied that the
waxwings do sometimes destroy not a
little early fruit, calling down upon
them righteous indignation; but at
other times they more than make
amends for the mischief done.</p>
<p>Of the voice Mr. A. W. Butler says,
"They have a peculiar lisping note,
uttered in a monotone varying in pitch.
As they sit among the branches of an
early Richmond cherry tree in early
June, the note seems to be inhaled, and
reminds me of a small boy who, when
eating juicy fruit, makes a noise by inhalation
in endeavoring to prevent the
loss of the juice and then exclaims,
'How good!' As the birds start to
fly, each repeats the note three or four
times. These notes develop into a
song as the summer comes on; a lisping,
peculiar song that tells that the
flocks are resolving into pairs as the
duties of the season press upon them."
After the pairing season there is a
great show of affection between the
two birds, which often continues long
after the nesting season has closed.</p>
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