S2 Page 6

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kcorriveau at Jun 24, 2014 11:57 PM

S2 Page 6

Collector: Grinnell - 1925
Location: Lassen Section (Mineral)
Date: June 13-14, 1925
Page Number: 2462

forenoon nest-hunting. Found several, to be
reported upon later, in suitable locations for Dixon
to photograph them. Fished in the afternoon, securing
7 Eastern Brook and 1 Rainbow Trout. Deer tracks
abundant thru the willow bogs, forming trails; many
fresh tracks along the streams, as also up on the dry
slopes among the Ceanothus cordulatus mats, where
one was jumped by Mrs. G at 10 a.m. Saw a
Spotted Sandpiper on a scanty patch of gravel at the
edge of one of the numerous meadow channels of
Battle Creek - grassy meadows on willow jungles everywhere
else. A Tree Swallow in full song flew overhead -
the only swallow I have seen here.
A curious association of birds was evidently
established for birding in the willow bog, as follows:
Russet-backed Thrush, Lincoln Sparrow, Song Sparrow
(subsp.?), Traill Flycatcher, Yellow Warbler (subsp.),
Golden-Pileolated Warbler, Western Warbling Vireo and
Lazuli Bunting. Western Robins were, of course,
in the open meadows, and plenty of Sierra
Junco
s
along the edges of both the meadows and
the willow bogs, where these are bordered by
lodgepole pines.
June 14
Mrs. G. and I out hunting birds' nests all the
forenoon, finding only two, both unfinished. This
seems exactly the right season for finding
most small birds' nests; few are sitting yet.

S2 Page 6

Collector: Grinnell - 1925
Location: Lassen Section (Mineral)
Date: June 13-14, 1925
Page Number: 2462

forenoon nest-hunting. Found several, to be
reported upon later, in suitable locations for Dixon
to photograph them. Fished in the afternoon, securing
7 Eastern Brook and 1 Rainbow Trout. Deer tracks
abundant thru the willow bogs, forming trails; many
fresh tracks along the streams, as also up on the dry
slopes among the Ceanothus cordulatus mats, where
one was jumped by Mrs. G at 10 a.m. Saw a
Spotted Sandpiper on a scanty patch of gravel at the
edge of one of the numerous meadow channels of
Battle Creek - grassy meadows on willow jungles everywhere
else. A Tree Swallow in full song flew overhead -
the only swallow I have seen here.
A curious association of birds was evidently
established for birding in the willow bog, as follows:
Russet-backed Thrush, Lincoln Sparrow, Song Sparrow
(subsp.?), Traill Flycatcher, Yellow Warbler (subsp.),
Golden-Pileolated Warbler, Western Warbling Vireo and
Lazuli Bunting. Western Robins were, of course,
in the open meadows, and plenty of Sierra
Junco
s
along the edges of both the meadows and
the willow bogs, where these are bordered by
lodgepole pines.
June 14
Mrs. G. and I out hunting birds' nests all the
forenoon, finding only two, both unfinished. This
seems exactly the right season for finding
most small birds' nests; few are sitting yet.