FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   461   462   463   464   465   466   467   468   469   470   471   472   473   474   475   476   477   478   479   >>  
or, and proved to be some 2 feet in length and 18 inches in diameter, composed chiefly of dry grass, but with a few twigs, many feathers, and a strip or two of rags intermingled in the mass. The materials were loosely put together, and the nest was placed high up in a fork near the extremity of a branch. In the centre was a well-like cavity some 9 inches deep by 31/2 inches in diameter, at the bottom of which, amongst many feathers, lay four fresh eggs." Five is the full complement of eggs, but they very often lay only four, and once in a hundred times six are met with. From Hansie Mr. W. Blewitt writes that he "found numerous nests during May and June. They were all placed all keekur-trees, at heights of from 10 to 15 feet from the ground, the trees for the most part being situated on the banks of a canal or in the Dhana Beerh, a sort of jungle preserve. "The nests were densely built of keekur and zizyphus twigs, and thickly lined with rags, leaves, and straw. Five was the greatest number of eggs that I found in any one nest." Writing of his experience in the Delhi and Jhansi Divisions, Mr. F.R. Blewitt remarks that "the Pied Pastor breeds from June to August, making its nests between the outer branchlets of the larger lateral branches of trees, without special choice for any one kind. The nest is altogether roughly made, though some ingenuity is evinced in putting all the material of which it is composed together. Twigs, grasses, rags, feathers, &c. are all brought into requisition to form the large-made structure, which I have found, though less commonly, at a higher altitude from the ground than the 8 or 10 feet Jerdon speaks of." Major C.T. Bingham writes:--"Breeds in Allahabad in June, July, and August; and at Delhi in May, June, and July. The nest is a large shapeless mass of straw, feathers, and rags, having a deep cavity for the eggs, which are generally five in number. The nest is almost always placed at the extreme tip of some slender branch, and there is no attempt at concealment." Mr. J.E. Cripps tells us that at Furreedpore, in Bengal, this Myna is "very common, and a permanent resident. They eat fruit as well as insects. Lay in May and June, building their huge nests at various heights from the ground, and in any tree that comes in handy. I have generally found the nests lined with the white feathers of the paddy-birds; some of the feathers being as much as six and seven inches in length. T
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   461   462   463   464   465   466   467   468   469   470   471   472   473   474   475   476   477   478   479   >>  



Top keywords:

feathers

 

inches

 

ground

 
number
 

generally

 

heights

 

keekur

 

Blewitt

 

writes

 
cavity

August

 
diameter
 
composed
 

branch

 
length
 

Bingham

 

ingenuity

 

choice

 
altogether
 
roughly

special

 
material
 

grasses

 

structure

 
brought
 

requisition

 

commonly

 
Jerdon
 

speaks

 

putting


higher

 

altitude

 

evinced

 

insects

 

building

 

resident

 

common

 

permanent

 

Bengal

 

extreme


slender

 

Allahabad

 
shapeless
 

Furreedpore

 

Cripps

 

attempt

 

concealment

 
Breeds
 

jungle

 

bottom