Harrisburg, Pa.
July 29, 1928.
CONTENTS
PAGE [Introductory] vii [A Word to the Beginner] 1 [Bird-Songs] 2 [Note-Books] 3 [Specimens] 3 [Field-Glasses] 3 [Books] 4 [Magazines] 4 [Bird Hikes] 5 [In the Field] 5 [Value of Pennsylvania Birds] 6 [Helping Our Bird Friends] 7 [Life-Zones in Pennsylvania] 8 [Bird-Migration in Pennsylvania] 9 [List of Species] 11 [Index of Bird Names] 163
AN INTRODUCTION TO THE
BIRDS OF PENNSYLVANIA
A WORD TO THE BEGINNER
As you glance over the pages of this book you may say to yourself, “I can never learn all of these birds.” This is a natural attitude of mind upon the part of one to whom many bird-names are new and who feels that he doesn’t know much about birds.
It may be reassuring to you to learn that most people know more about birds than they realize. Already your mind is full of common bird-names. You wouldn’t be reading this book had you not already learned a good deal about some birds.
Here is a bit of good advice. Instead of taking this book to the field with you in the hope that you may accurately identify every bird you see, suppose you choose eight or ten birds which you do not know, but about which you wish to learn, and concentrate upon these. You already know the Bluebird, the Robin, the Crow. Suppose you try now the Wood Thrush, the Towhee, the Meadowlark. Look these up in the book, find out whether you may expect to see them at the time you are to make your trip of discovery, learn where to look for them, what to look for when they appear, something about what they will say as they call or sing—and fasten these facts in your mind. If you adopt this procedure, you will not be misled into identifying some bird of the deep woods as a Meadowlark, or a bird of the open field as a Wood Thrush. Some birds will puzzle you, of course, but as you continue your study these problems will be solved.
As a serious bird student you will, first of all, want to be able to describe a bird accurately, using some acceptable scientific terms. Some of these will be new to you, but they will all become understandable in a short time. On the next page is a chart showing the names of the bird’s parts. You should become so familiar with these words that they will not confuse you.