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Jack Miner and the Birds, and Some Things I Know about Nature

Chapter 40: CHAPTER XXXVI. Conclusion.
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About This Book

The author presents a collection of first-person essays and practical notes on observing, raising, and protecting wild and domestic birds. He recounts experiences with quail, pheasants, ducks, swans, and Canada geese, detailing feeding, nesting, trapping, tagging, and sheltering techniques and describing relationships with dogs and methods for controlling predators such as weasels. Close observations of migration, nesting concealment, senses, and possible bird communication alternate with hands-on guidance for creating sanctuaries and martin houses. Anecdotes about individual birds illustrate themes of loyalty, loss, and conservation, while chapters on sportsmanship and community education emphasize humane stewardship and habitat protection.

CHAPTER XXXVI.
Conclusion.

In closing, I wish to say to my many friends that I have done as you requested: I have written the book. And have made many mistakes, often repeating myself when I had volumes of untouched material; yet I have done the best I could.

And to the purchaser, don’t think your money is thrown away; for if I get a profit it will surely go towards helping our migratory birds over the top.

On going to the publisher I expect to order a few thousand copies. If I see that these are appreciated by the public I may write a booklet on Boys and Home, although I have nothing from which to write but practical experience, being just a grown-up boy myself; mother said I would never be of age. Yet I feel fully qualified to deal briefly with this most important subject, knowing that H-o-u-s-e does not spell Home.

I can sympathize with all classes, especially him who thinks himself down and out, for I have had black and blue proof that a good, swift kick in the right time and place will give a bare-foot boy a good lift in

THE END.
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TRANSCRIBER’S NOTE
  1. Silently corrected typographical errors and variations in spelling.
  2. Archaic, non-standard, and uncertain spellings retained as printed.