“ Will'll flying from one place to another, without searching the ground, it moves with considerable rapidity,
a t such a height as to clear the trees and other elevated objects without deviating. I t is not known, however,
to sour to a great height. On obtaining its prey it usually devours it on the spot, carrying it off only when it
judges that it is liable to be molested. When satiated, it retires to some quiet place, or perches on a wall, a
stone, o r a stamp, until digestion is advanced: In its rambles it searches the cultivated fields and pastures,
but in summer and autumn is partial to heaths and commons.; and in such places it reposes a t night and rears
its young. Although nowhere very common, it is generally dispersed, and in some districts pretty numerous,
in the brceding-senson. In Scotland it betakes itself to the hilly tracts and moors from the middle o f spring
to the end of autumn, but in winter frequents the lower cultivated districts. It Is a permanent resident, and
does not appear to receive any accession of numbers, or to undergo any periodical diminution.”
Like Macgillivray, I have never had the good fortune to find its nest. I shall therefore transcribe a very
valuable account o f its breeding given by Sir William Jardinc.
“ In a country possessing a considerable portion of plain and mountain, where I have had the greatest
opportunities o f attending to them, they always retire at the commencement o f the breeding-season to the
wildest h ills; and during this time not one Individual will be found in the low country. F o r several days
before commencing their nest the male and female are seen soaring abont, as In search of or examining a
proper situation, are very noisy, and toy and cuff each other in the air. When the site is fixed, and the nest
completed, thefemale is left alone, and, when hatching, will not suffer the male to visit the nest but on his
approach rises and drives him with screams to a distance I The nest is very frequently made in a heath-
bush by the side o f some ravine, and is composed of sticks, with a very slender lining-. I t is sometimes
formed on one o f those places called scars, or where there has been a rut on the side of a steep hill after a
mountain thunder-shower; here little or no nest is made, and the eggs are laid on the bare earth, which has
been scraped hollow. In a flat or level country some common is generally chosen, and the nest is found in a
whin or other scrubby bush a t a short height from the ground. The young are well supplied with food, I
believe by both parents, though I have only seen the female in attendance; and I have found in and near the
nest the common small lizard, stone-chats, and young grouse.
" When the birds are perfectly grown, they, with the old birds, leave the high country, and return to their
old haunts, hunting with regularity the fields o f grain, and now commit great havoc among the young game
At night they seem to have general roosting-places either among whins or long heath, and always in some
open spot o f ground. On a moor o f considerable extent I have seen seven in the space o f an acre. They
began to approach the sleeping-ground about sunset, and, before going to roost, hunted the whole moor
crossing each other often, three or four in view a t a time, gliding backwards and forwards in easy graceful
circles, with seemingly little effort or flapping o f the wings. Half an hour may he spent in this way. When
they approach the roost they skim three or four times over it to see that there is no interruption, and then at
once drop into the spot. These places are easily found in the daytime; and the birds may he caught bv
placing a common rat-trap, or they may he shot in a moonlight night. In both ways I have procured many
specimens. 3
The eggs, which vary from three to five in number, are bluish white, sometimes faintly dotted with brown
a n d a re generally about an inch and three qnarters in length by an inch and a third in breadth
The preceding extracts from the writings of Macgillivray and Sir William Jardine must be regarded as
descriptive of the bird at the time they wrote, some thirty years a g o ; but, as I have already said it
is now not nearly so numerous. Still it is to be found in many parts o f England and Scotland and ’the
1 1 H l i G ” e 3 P,*ir “f thlS SPeCieS ° n H ° f ‘he “ ° ° rS ” ear hi6 seat a t r"™-ary in
Besides the British Islands, the Hen Harrier inhabits the whole o f Central Europe, North Africa, Asia
Minor, and Persia ; and Jerdon states that it is a "w in te r visitant to India, Bootan, Kumaon, and the north,
western Himalayas, perhaps extending to the plains in the Punjab only.”
So much difference exists in the size and colouring o f the sexes of this and other Harriers, that, had we not
abundant proofs to the contrary, we might readily assume that they were distinct species. The adult male
always o fa delicate g re y ; hn, the young o f this sex, for the first, and probably J second year, is brown
ike the female, and this respect resembles the Kestrel and many others of our rapacious birds; a n i
« 7 “1™ 8 as “ investigation to arrive a t as intimate a knowledge of
them as has been achieved with regard to our own species Ringiii!'!:1: ; : ' ; ,male’somwhat icss than :he p j fg g a <*» - g ¡¡g -
H R R 9 H 9 B 9 I