VANELLUS CRISTATUS .
Lapwing or Peewit.
Tringa Vanellus, Linn. Syst. N at., tom. i. p. 248.
Vanellus cristatus, Temm. Man. d’Orn., p. 348.
:—:-----Gavia, Leach, Syst. Cat of Spec; of Indig. Mamm. and Birds in Brit. Mus., p. 29.
Charadrius Vanellus, Wagl. Syst. Av., Charadrius, sp. 1. 1
I n d e p e n d e n t l y o f the British Islands, the Lapwing is found all over the temperate and warmer portions
o f Europe, from Scandinavia to the Mediterranean ; it also inhabits Morocco and Algeria, occurs in
Madeira, and extends its range eastward to Egypt, Syria, Persia, and the Punjab. Moreover we know
that it forms part of the avifauna o f China and J a p a n ; for Mr. Swinhoe informs us it is found from
Shanghai to P e k in ; and the Russian naturalists have observed it at Astracan, in the vicinity o f Lake Baikal,
and in Amoorland.
Whatever misdemeanour may be laid at the door o f some of our native birds, the Lapwing, a t least, is
free from any such ch a rg e ; for where is there one th at is more useful or less inclined to mischief? No
kind o f depredation can be brought home to it, its whole existence and economy leading it to frequent
the open wastes, and seldom to trespass upon cultivated districts, unless it be when the land is in fallow
o r occasionally during seed-time. Fields o f waving corn and orchards redundant with fruit offer it no
temptation: its province is the upland sheep-walk, the wild moorland, the wet grassy mead, the marsh,
and. the chases of. olden times ( if any be left), over which it trips and enlivens their solitude with its
plaintive cry o f pee-wit. Before scientific farming and drainage were in vogue, when the border-lines of
two countries, now happily united, were haunted by the moss-trooper, and the neighbouring moors were too
often fields o f blood, it was more abundant than it is now. Happily, associations of a far different character
a re connected with it, since its justly esteemed eggs rank first among the viands of the wedding breakfast,
and the festive supper is never complete without them, if procurable. The great heaths o f Surrey and
Hampshire, the peaty lowlands and sandy warrens o f Norfolk and Suffolk, the marshes of Lincoln- and
Cambridge-shires, Essex, and Kent, yearly send their q u o ta : the number thus, combined with those sent
from Holland must be immense, and it is surprising that the bird, though perhaps more rapidly declining
in numbers than any other British species, is so plentiful as it still is.. Dr. Plomley informed Mr. Yarrell
that two hundred dozen eggs were sent from Romney Marsh alone to Dover in 1839.
Notwithstanding that the enclosure of many of the localities formerly frequented by this bird has greatly
curtailed its habitat, it is still plentiful in the more sterile parts o f the country; and I know of no British
bird more generally diffused over the three kingdoms, for it is found far and near in sufficient abundance to
render it common everywhere: in the west o f Cornwall and on the sea-girt Scilly Isles it is as numerous
in winter as it is in the north o f Scotland in summer; its range also extends over the Orkney, the Shetland,
and the Western Isles, and it even visits Iceland. Mr. Augustus Smith informed me th at the Lapwing
usually comes to Scilly in severe winters, and was more plentiful in 1862 and 1863 than usual, and that
many then died from starvation.
In its disposition the Lapwing is naturally shy and distrustful, and, except in summer, when it is
dispersed over the country in pairs, seldom admits of a very near approach. During the nesting-period
it employs many artifices to draw the intruder away from the part o f the heath o r marsh in which its
eggs are deposited, in the course of which it performs many singular and interesting evolutions, tumbling,
dipping, and turning with great rapidity; still, with all its cunning, man’s reasoning powers and his
habit o f observation render him more than a match for the bird, and those who are accustomed to the
search readily find the eggs, although they are deposited in the midst o f the moor, without, apparently,
any means o f direction to their site. Quick-eyed, indeed, are the eggers whose daily bread depends
upon the success attending their long tramps over the heaths and commons on which live the Lapwings,
the Stone-chats, and the W heatears but scarcely aught else. Like the Wren and some other small birds,
who often build several nests before determining in which the eggs shall be deposited, the Lapwing is
capricious as to the site for the nurture o f her future progeny, on which point the following passage from
the late Mr. St. John’s ‘ Natural History and Sport in Moray’ may be appropriately quoted:—They “ seem
to commence several nests before they determine on laying their eggs in any one, as I have frequently
seen three or four nests begun all near each other ; and the Peewits are far too quarrelsome for these to be
the nests of different birds. By the time their four eggs are laid, they generally collect a considerable
quantity o f straws, roots, or sticks, appearing to increase with every egg they lay.” In confirmation of