Page:Condor20(2).djvu/23

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Mar., 1918
A RETURN TO THE DAKOTA LAKE REGION
69

she made no sign; and as if feeling his dismissal final, he flew back to the garden, presumably leaving the field to a third Meadowlark who was waiting as if to see what the decision of the lady might be.

His love song, especially as given in flight, is a musical rhapsody, an elaborate musical performance suggestive of the enraptured flight song of the Oven-bird, altogether apart from the rich, uplifted songs of both eastern and western Meadowlarks.

The season of song varied somewhat with the birds. A Vesper Sparrow was heard July 12th singing with such sweetness and fervor that I imagined a second nest was in progress, while both House Wren and Song Sparrow sang enthusiastically, and the Sora Rail joyfully the second week in August. In the main, however, the lovely song of the Meadowlark stood out with peculiar charm in the August dearth of song.

In June and July the tinkle of the Horned Lark was often heard from the piazza, for the birds were attracted by the large black-earthed square of the vegetable garden, as a family of Killdeer were attracted to the soft earth of the potato patch. But our most striking Visitors were the handsome Yellow- headed Blackbirds who came from their marsh nesting grounds to the garden for worms. Between times they sat around on fence post or wagon wheel looking very much overdressed with their low-cut orange vests, at intervals giving vent to their feelings in curious fashion. One of their calls suggested the krup of the Red-headed Woodpecker; another, too harsh and strident for such elegant personages, might have suggested an exaggerated Redwing o-ka-lee, but was in reality a strange oak-oak-kah, so run together that the k's gave a sustained throaty effect. The Yellow-head's song was even more peculiar than his call. Raising his head he started out not unmusically, but followed with an awful strangling utterance, after which he serenely put his head down and sang a low rhapsody full of delightful musical murmurings! Such originality carried into every day life would surely make him an enlivening companion!

Several times, as I sat writing on the piazza, I looked up just in time to see a brown Duck furtively waddling by along the protecting bottom of a terrace; but hunt as I might, I never succeeded in discovering her nest.

In the late afternoons the rattle of old Polly's hoofs would make me look up quickly to greet our little school boy, home again from his daily three mile ride across the prairie. And later, when he had taken a look at his new brother, at the sound of loping feet I would see him again, on a fresh horse, racing bare-back down the wheat fields to bring in the cows for the evening milking. In the barn yard at one time were found some of the repulsive looking mud puppies chanced on in other places, one half buried in a mound of soft earth-- big black, lizard-like creatures, sometimes spotted with yellow, with round puppy heads, soft bodies, and thin, high paddle-like tails which they whipped around to terrorize inquisitive chickens and other too familiar observers. A plague of these horrid, uncanny creatures appeared at times, as once during a storm when so many took refuge in a cook car, that they had to be shovelled out of the door, the Norwegian cook informed me.

From the piazza of the farmhouse many a beautiful picture was seen during the season. Gorgeous sunsets were so frequent in this lake region with its heavy summer storms that they were one of my greatest pleasures. One June night when the wind was shifting and the sky breaking away after a storm--low buffy clouds blowing southwest--the sun shot out blindingly in the