Search Results for: Carpets tufted made up
eight or ten together, and escorted by the nuthatch or the downy woodpecker. it is pleasing to listen to the sound produced by their labour, which in a calm day may be heard at the distance of twenty or thirty yards. if a nut or an acorn is accidentally dropped, the bird flies to the ground, picks it up
they do not use the tee-tee-tee of their relative the black-capped titmouse, half so often as the latter does, but emit a considerable variety of sounds, many of which, if the bird from which they come does not happen to be known to the listener, are apt to induce disappointment in him, when on going up...
https://www.audubon.org/birds-of-america/crested-titmouse