28 MARCH 1931, page 12

A New Migration.

This week we shall probably see the arrival in London of the first migrant birds : a wheatear, perhaps, on Hampstead and a willow warbler at Dulwich. Writing some while ago in......

Some Of Those Who Watch Birds In London Have Records

that countrymen in the wildest districts of the West might envy. Not long since two species of the great Northern divers, such as Thoreau described as among the more precious......

Country Life

THE SWEET 0' THE YEAR. The first day of official spring seldom produced quite so many spring events as met the senses of observers who left the Town on that day. The heat......

• To Find This Easterly Bird Haunt You Proceed By

'bus or tram to a popular and populous part of the city. You reach one corner of the open space while still well within the city, though the remoter portion possesses a certain......

Wanted : Guides.

Letters reach me corroborating a lament of the scarcity of natural history guides. Personally I especially regretted the lack of any sort of guide in Western Australia, as in......

Rus In Urbe.

Yet greater marvels were reported from Hampstead. London is indeed a marvellous place for birds. So wrote Mr. Julian Huxley, who is one of our best observers, in a letter to the......

* * * A. Return To The Land.

One item that I have just seen in a new sort of employmen t list is both surprising and gratifying. One labour exchange, it seems, has begun to make yearly a rough census of the......