A ring-ouzel flies wildly from the rowan-tree, and four or five species of thrushes are among the berries of the shrubs.
And again, where the ring-ouzel is common, the thrush will get its brief song exactly.
To our mind, the Ring-ouzel always increased in interest during the breeding season.
Neither do the dotterel and the ring-ouzel, the latter in song so mellow, both moving on speedily into the hilly districts.
The ring-ouzel is a regular visitor to the open country of Dartmoor, while the dipper haunts many of its streams.