<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_IX" id="CHAPTER_IX">CHAPTER IX.</SPAN></h2>
<p class="caption3nb">AT MEAL-TIME.</p>
<p><span class="smcap">If</span> we had twenty birds in a cage and had to hunt
for all the food they could eat, the same as they would
do if they were free, we should have a busy time of it,
and very likely the birds would starve.</p>
<p>Birds have sharp eyes. Watch the finches and see
how they hop from twig to twig, pecking at tiny things
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[ 40 ]</SPAN></span>
which we cannot even see. These birds seem to be
near-sighted, finding their dinner right under their eyes.
We could not possibly see anything so near our faces.</p>
<p>Then there are some of the birds who seem far-sighted,
seeing food at a longer distance than we could,
and darting for it as quick as a flash.</p>
<p>It is a fact that most birds are both near-sighted and
far-sighted. Their eyes are both telescopes and microscopes.
Watch Madam Mocker or Mrs. Robin. She
will see a grasshopper on the other side of the lawn, or
a daddy-long-legs taking a sun-bath at the far end of
the picket fence. The grasshopper and the daddy
haven't time to get up and be off before they are surprised
by Madam Bird's sharp bill.</p>
<p>Birds, like other people, must work if they will eat,
and so they go in search of the cupboard or the cellar,
and it is sometimes hard work to find them. The cupboard
is anywhere in a dry place, and the door is never
locked. The cellar is almost anywhere, too, where it
is cool and damp, under the grass and chips and down
in cracks between logs and boards. The food in the
cellar is very unlike the food in the cupboard.</p>
<p>There are some insects that never see the light and
cannot bear the sunshine. They are usually soft, tender
things, and live where it is moist and cool. We call
these the food in the bird's cellar. There are other
insects that love the dry air, where it is warm, the
bark of trees and the hot sand, and these we call the
food in the bird's cupboard.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[ 41 ]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Birds spend nearly all their time in hunting for
something to eat. Life seems to be one long picnic
for them. They digest rapidly. Their food is found
and picked up in very small quantities, excepting the
food of the gourmands like the buzzards. These birds
are certainly not very tidy or nice about their meals.
They eat as much as they possibly can, and then sit
about on the low fences, or even on the ground, too
full and heavy to fly away.</p>
<p>Birds have sharp ears and can hear bugs and worms
long before they can be seen. The woodpecker listens
for the grubs with his ear close to the bark of the trees.
But woodpeckers are not always after grubs when you
see them running up and down a tree trunk and pecking
holes in the bark. They like the inner skin of the
bark for food, and the sap-suckers drink the sap of the
tree.</p>
<p>Watch the robin or the mocking-bird on the lawn.
You have been sprinkling that lawn for two weeks in
midsummer, just to make the grass nice and green.
Perhaps you did not think that you were making it
easy for the birds to get something to eat in a dry time.
But you see that your sprinkling or watering has made
the turf mellow and soft, so that the worms can crawl
up to the surface more easily than if it were dry. And
the birds are making the most of your kindness, as you
see.</p>
<p>See how that little bird cants his head and listens.
We imagine him holding up his hand and saying,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[ 42 ]</SPAN></span>
"Don't move, please, nor do anything to scare this
worm away. I hear it coming up to the top of the
ground, and I am very hungry."</p>
<div id="fig_12" class="fig_center" style="width: 302px;">
<ANTIMG src="images/fig_12.png" width-obs="302" height-obs="428" alt="" />
<div class="fig_caption"><span class="smcap">Downy Woodpecker.</span></div>
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<p>Once we saw a very funny sight. A mocking-bird
in the yard had grown very tame and had nested close
by, taking no pains to fly away from us. She soon
came to know that we had something for her to eat
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[ 43 ]</SPAN></span>
when we called, "Come, Chickie," and she would fly
close to us with eager eyes, not at all afraid.</p>
<p>Every night at sundown, which is the bird's supper-time,
we went to the summer-house and turned over
the empty flower-pots. Under these pots little black
bugs were hiding, but more especially the saw-bugs,
soft, gray, crawling things. The mocking-bird would
follow us as fast as she could, picking up the bugs for
her young. When she had a mouth full of the wriggling
insects, she would go and feed them to her babies
and come back again to the moist places under the pots,
until every bug was captured.</p>
<p>Once there were more bugs under one pot than she
could possibly carry at one time, and she was in great
trouble to know what to do about it. She swallowed
as many as she wanted herself, and then she began
cramming her mouth full for the babies. The bugs
looked so tempting, and there were so many, she did
not like to lose any of them, and so she kept on picking
them up. After her mouth was as full as it could hold,
the bugs kept falling out at the sides of her bill, and she
would pick them up again over and over without knowing
it, until we scared her away by our laughing.</p>
<p>Some birds, as we have said, such as the owls, take
their food whole. Of course, bones, hair, and feathers
cannot be digested, so after a time they are thrown up
in the shape of little balls, called "castings," and by
examining them we can find out exactly what the bird
has been eating.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[ 44 ]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Most of the birds we are acquainted with pick their
food very carefully, and eat only that which will digest
without trouble. You can see them hold it down with
one foot, looking at it closely to be quite sure that it
is really good to eat. They often pull it to shreds and
swallow it in little bits. If it is a butterfly dinner,
the wings are torn off and sent floating to the ground.
If it is a grasshopper supper, the tough, wiry legs of
the insect are thrown away, and only the rich, luscious
breast and fat thighs are eaten.</p>
<p>In California we have the pepper tree, which is all
covered with clusters of red berries. Under the thin,
red skin is a sweet, soft pulp which covers the seed.
The pulp is all there is of the pepper berry which the
birds can digest. But this is a very sweet morsel indeed,
and tourist birds come a long distance to get it.</p>
<p>Robin redbreasts,<SPAN name="FNanchor_6"></SPAN><SPAN href="#Footnote_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</SPAN> come here in winter to eat our
pepper berries, and then, of course, they disgorge the
hard seeds, which they cannot possibly digest, just as
the owls do the bones of their prey.</p>
<div class="footnote">
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_6"></SPAN><SPAN href="#FNanchor_6"><span class="label">[6]</span></SPAN> <i>Merula migratoria propinqua.</i></p>
</div>
<p>We think the mocking-birds have taught the robins
to do this, and we have noticed the wax-wings<SPAN name="FNanchor_7"></SPAN><SPAN href="#Footnote_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</SPAN> doing
the same thing.</p>
<div class="footnote">
<p><SPAN name="Footnote_7"></SPAN><SPAN href="#FNanchor_7"><span class="label">[7]</span></SPAN> <i>Ampelis cedrorum.</i></p>
</div>
<p>When the winter tourist birds make a raid on our
yards, we can hear the tiny pepper seeds fall in a
shower on our tin roofs, under the tall trees, and the
door-steps will be covered. Sometimes the seeds come
down so thick and fast that we can think of nothing
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[ 45 ]</SPAN></span>
but a hail-storm. The pepper berries ripen in midwinter,
and it is worth one's while to see a flock of
robins and wax-wings come into our yard. In a few
days almost every pepper tree has been robbed, and
nothing is left us but the brown seeds.</p>
<p>These, and other birds from the north who come to
pay us a visit in winter, are tamer than they are at
home. They seem to think that we are on our honor
to be polite to strangers, and so we are.</p>
<p>If you watch closely, wherever you live, at some time
in the year you will see visiting birds in your yard and
you ought to be polite to them.</p>
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