The Burgess Animal Book for Children
and over the Green Meadows, for the little people who live there are great gossips. So it was not surprising that Striped Chipmunk heard all ab
aimed Old Mother Nature. "What hav
ll you let me stay, Mother Nat
lly glad you have come today, because to-day's lesson is to be about you and your cousins. Now, Pe
eally seen him before. "He is smaller than they are," began Pet
odded encouragingly
des, a black stripe running down the middle of his back. The rest of his coat is reddish-brown above and li
hipmunk. "I can climb if I want to, and
," said Old M
ntinued Peter, "and he is one of the brightest, livel
r," said Striped
he ground. I guess this is all I know about him. I should say the chief difference between Striped Chipmunk an
ifferences which you have not mentioned. Striped Chipmunk has a big pocket on t
times at Striped Chipmunk with those pockets stuffed with nuts or seeds until his
dn't get along without them. They save me a l
to pop his head out on a bright day to see how the weather is. A great many folks call Striped Chipmunk a Ground Squirrel, but more prop
gh to be out of reach of Jack Frost I make a nice little bedroom with a bed of grass and leaves, and I make another little room for a s
o find the entrance to your tunnel?" as
the stone wall on the edge of the O
l the sand you must have taken out wou
e. "There isn't a grain of that sand around my doorway. I took it all out through another hole some distance away, a
re are no rocks or stones. He likes best the flat, open country. He is called Spermophile because that means seed-eater, and
ly he has more of them than you have, and they are broken up into little dots. He is called the Thirteen-lined Spermophile. He has pockets in his cheeks just as you have, and he makes a home down in the ground very similar to yours. All the family d
l, very like Happy Jack's. He gets into so much mischief in the grain fields and in the orchards that he is quite as much disliked as is Jack Rabbit. This particular member of the family is quite as much at home among rocks and tree roots as in open g
," said Pe
" said Stri
t," said
t," said
round, red Mr. Sun went to bed behind the Purple Hills and the Black Shadows c
gly. "Jumper," said she, "what is wrong with
insisted Jum
great land who can fly are the Bats. Timmy the Flying Squirrel simply jumps from the top of a tree and slides down on the air to the foot of another tree. If you had used your eyes you would have noticed that wh
ing, he looks as if he had win
he jumps from a high place. You've seen a bird, after flapping its wings to get going, sail along with them outstretched and motionless. Timmy does the same thing, only he gets going by jumping. You may have noticed that he usually goes to the top of a tree before jumping; then he can sail down a won
ver see him?" inqui
led up in a little ball in his nest, fast asleep. Timmy likes the nig
ittle sheepish as if he were a wee bit ashamed of
bigger. His coat is a soft yellowish-brown above; beneath he is all white. His fur is wonderfully soft. He has very large, dark, sof
like his cousins?"
"Also he eats grubs and insects. He dearly loves
make his home?"
akes a comfortable nest of bark lining, grass, and moss, or any other soft material he can find. Occasionall
any enemies?" a
ut the one he has most reason to fear is Hooty the Owl, and that is th
winter?" piped up
if he happens to be living where the weather does not get very cold, he is act
en Johnny Chuck
Johnny and his relatives, the Marmots, certainly cannot be overlooked. We will take them