March 31, 1776
The willows in bloom diversify the coppices, & hedge-rows in a beautiful manner.
The willows in bloom diversify the coppices, & hedge-rows in a beautiful manner.
Hirundo domestica! Hirundo agrestis! Blackbirds are mostly destroyed by shooters. Farmer Tredgold saw five hirundines at Willey-mill next Farnham playing about briskly over the mill-pond: four, he says, were house-swallows, & the fifth an house-martin with a white rump. These birds are very early! Some few bank-martins haunt round the skirts of London, & frequent the dirty pools in St. George’s fields, & near White-chappel: perhaps they build in the scaffold-holes of some deserted house; for steep banks there are none.
Flocks of fieldfares remain: no red-wings are seen. No song-thrushes are heard; the seem to be destroyed by the hard weather. Some wagtails survive.
Came from London to Selborne. Hot sun: summer-like weather. When I arrived in Hants I found the wheat looking well, & the turneps little injured. My laurels & laurustines somewhat injured; but only those that stood in hot sunny aspects. No evergreens quite destroyed & not half the damage sustained that befell in Jan. 1768. Those laurels that are somewhat scorched on the S. sides, are perfectly untouched on their N. sides. The care I took in ordering the snow to be carefully shaken from the branches wherever it fell, seems greatly to have availed my laurels. Mr Yalden’s laurels facing to the N. untouched. Portugal laurels not hurt.