The avifauna of the Himalayas is a large one. It includes birds found
throughout the range, birds confined to the eastern or western portions, birds
resident all through the year, birds that are mere seasonal visitors, birds
found only at high elevations, birds confined to the lower hills, birds abundant
everywhere, birds nowhere common. Most ornithological books treat of all these
sorts and conditions of birds impartially, with the result that the
non-ornithological reader who dips into them finds himself completely out of his
depth.
He who plunges into the essays that follow need have no fear of getting out
of his depth. With the object of guarding against this catastrophe, I have
described as few birds as possible. I have ignored all those that are not likely
to be seen daily in summer in the Himalayas at elevations between 5000 and 7000
feet above the sea-level. Moreover, the birds of the Western have been separated
from those of the Eastern Himalayas. The result is that he
who peruses this book will be confronted with comparatively few birds, and
should experience little difficulty in recognising them when he meets them in
the flesh. I am fully alive to the fact that the method I have adopted has
drawbacks. Some readers are likely to come across birds at the various hill
stations which do not find place in this book. Such will doubtless charge me
with sins of omission. I meet these charges in anticipation by adopting the
defence of the Irishman, charged with the theft of a chicken, whose crime had
been witnessed by several persons: "For every witness who saw me steal the
chicken, I'll bring twenty who didn't see me steal it!"
The reader will come across twenty birds which the essays that follow will
enable him to identify for every one he sees not described in them.