birds 
of the winter seems to care much for these berries but the bluebirds 
evidently love them. As another instance of their tastes in this direction 
may be mentioned the fact that for the past three weeks a pair of blue 
birds have made many visits every day to a Chinese matrimony vine, 
by the dining room window of the writer's home. This vine, as 
everyone knows, has a wreath of juicy red berries in the fall, which 
hang through the winter and are dried, but still red, in the spring. It was 
the first week of March when the family first heard the pleasing notes 
of the blue bird outside the window at breakfast time, and saw the 
brilliant male sitting on a post on the back lawn and his less brilliant, 
but equally attractive mate sitting on the clothesline. A little later and 
he flew to the vine, picked off one berry and ate it, took another one in 
his mouth and then returned to his post, while she followed his example. 
Both chirped and pronounced the berries good, though up to that time 
the members of the household had supposed they were poisonous. 
After a few more bites of the morning meal the birds went all around 
the house, inspecting every nook and crevice. But they found every 
place fully occupied by the pestiferous English sparrows, who darted at 
them maliciously. For two whole days the blue birds stayed around the 
lawn and garden, but the sparrows made their lives miserable and 
finally they went to the timber an eighth of a mile away and selected an 
abiding place in the cavity of a basswood. But every morning and 
evening, sometimes many times during the day, they came for their 
meal of berries from the vine. Usually they were on hand as soon as the 
sun was up, and a more devoted and well behaved couple was never 
seen either in the bird or the human world. 
* * * * * 
We rise at length and walk along the wooded slope admiring new 
beauties at every step. Here is a thicket of wild gooseberry filled with 
dark green leaves and the tinkling notes of tree sparrows, and we hardly 
know which is the more beautiful. A little farther and we are in a tangle 
of pink and magenta raspberry vines from which the green leaves are 
just pushing out. The elder has made a great start; the yellowish-green
shoots from the stems and from the roots are already more than six 
inches long. The panicled dogwood and the red-osier dogwood (no, not 
the flowering dogwood) as yet show no signs of foliage, but the fine 
white lines in the bark of the bladdernut, which have been so attractive 
all winter, are now enhanced by the soft myrtle green of the tender 
young leaves. The shrubby red cedar is twice as fresh and green as it 
was a month ago, as it hangs down the face of the splintered rock where 
the farmer boys have set a trap to catch the mother mink. But Mrs. 
Mink is wary. Here is a pile of feathers, evidently from a wild duck, 
which seems to indicate that while the duck was making a meal of a 
fish which she had brought to shore, the mink pounced upon her and 
ate both duck and fish. 
While we stand looking there is a slight movement among the roots of 
a silver maple at the river's brink. A moment later Mrs. Mink comes 
around the tree and towards us. She is about eighteen inches long, with 
a bushy tail about another eight inches, her blackish-brown body about 
as big round as a big man's wrist, and she has a "business-looking" face 
and jaw. Did you ever try to take the young minks from their nest in the 
latter part of April and did Mrs. Mink fight? She hasn't seen or smelled 
us yet, but suddenly when she is within seven feet of us, there is an 
upward movement of that supple, snakelike neck, a quick glance of 
those black diamond eyes, and she turns at right angles and dives into 
the river. A frog could not enter the water so silently. 
* * * * * 
We climb the slope again and pause in front of a big sugar maple, a 
rather rare sight hereabouts. The sap-sucker has bored a row of fresh 
holes in the bark of the tree and the syrup has flowed out so freely that 
the whole south side of the tree is wet with it. Scores of wasps, bees 
and flies of all sizes and colors are revelling in the sweetness. 
Finally we come to where there is less grass but more dead leaves and 
leaf mould, and here    
    
		
	
	
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