The myrtle warblers not only foraged about the bushes which served the flycatchers as watch-towers; but the two kinds of birds, so dissimilar in size and habits, changed their feeding grounds together.
The last Audubon warbler that I saw in the spring was a lone female, who foraged in company with a pair of the resident bluebirds in the open pasture.
Early the following morning, and again at the close of the day, the warbler foraged over the lawn in the same fashion.
He sang his dreamy, unsubstantial song as he foraged along with his newly found companions.
The birds foraged out to a limited extent from the mesquites towards the river into the arrowweed and willows, and away from the river at the mouths of washes into the ironwoods and palo verdes.
Here theyforaged upon the lawns between the cottages, hopping rather than walking like water-thrushes, and when alarmed flew up to rest upon the broad fronds of the coconut palms that lined the sandy beach.
These thorns probably were acquired while the bobcats foraged for woodrats or cottontails in the patches of prickly-pear, which are locally abundant in the sage belt.
At several ponds in lower San Antonio Canyon this bat was observed repeatedly as it foraged over the water and coursed low between rows of alders and Baccharis.
At Blue Ridge in September, 1951, these bats foraged approximately six feet above the ground beneath the canopy of coniferous foliage and between the trunks of the trees.
In December, 1951, it was found by tending the traps in the early evening that merriami foraged fairly early before the ground had frozen solidly.
On windy nights the pipistrelles often forsook their usual high forage habits and foraged 15 feet or so above the ground where the vegetation and outcrops of rock broke the force of the wind.
At the head of Grandview Canyon, tracks indicated that a coyote had foraged for about one half mile along the edge of a tract of dense oak and pinyon growth.
Pipistrelles often foraged in loose flocks of about half a dozen individuals.
In early April on the desert slope at 4800 feet in Mescal Canyon, pipistrelles foraged on evenings when it was windy but not cold.
It appeared that during my absence he had given way to the desire of providing something to eat, and had left the fire to burn out, while he foraged for roots.
An old corn mill, of the "quern" pattern before described, was foragedout from some forgotten nook or corner, and set to work preparing flour.
We soon foraged out three large dug-out canoes, which were concealed among the reeds hard by.
A young girl like Elizabeth coming out here in time of war, when this neutral ground between the lines is overridden and foraged to death, and deluged with blood by friend as well as foe?
We foraged around and found some putrid fish bones, with which we made soup.
It seemed to me, as I foraged here and there for food, it was not hunger that impelled me so much as the instinct of self-preservation.
He dearly loved to go abroad on a moonlight night, enjoying the scenery while he leisurely foraged about for food.
He foraged for himself now, for his wings were as broad and fleet as his mother’s.
In front of General Lee and on his right and left the country had been so often foraged by both Union and Confederate armies that it was denuded of supplies.
The arrieros foraged among the huts for cebada for the mules and a chicken or some eggs for us, but the Aymarás either had none or else surlily refused to sell, but there was fuel and with that a fine hot tinned dinner was prepared.
Sometimes after dark the Tacanas would paint their faces in streaks with the berries foraged at noon, and grimace and hop about the glowing embers of the fire with shrieks of joy.
Sleighs and especially sledges are being painted and put in order; the dogs which have run wild, and mostly foraged for themselves during the summer, are being discovered, captured and led off by strings and straps and wires about their necks.
Our host gave us each morning a dainty breakfast, and then we foraged for ourselves during the day.
Company foragedfar and near to obtain food, but with only partial success.
I foraged about and found the side-saddle and bridle in the harness-room.
Later she roused to the call of hunger, and foraged in the larder, or what served the studio as such, turning up a broken carton of Uneeda Biscuit and half a packet of black tea.
Early, or Long-street, or Jeb Stuart would have broken out some way and foraged around for supplies.
They relished extra dishes--such as ham and eggs, butter for their flapjacks, and milk for their coffee, and wherever they found supplies of this kind they foraged them.
We secured the makings of a square meal now and then while raiding around Richmond, but the territory had been foraged so often that it was considered mighty poor picking the last two years of the war.
Turtles most often foraged in cow dung that had a superficial, dried crust.
Box turtles usually foraged near the rock fences and the ravine (where dung was more abundant than in other parts of the area), and tended, as they foraged, to move parallel to these barriers.
The sunken boats of fishers, The foraged beeves and grain, The spoil of flake and storehouse, The good ship brings again.
The one bat from Bellavista was shot as it foraged in the evening along trees bordering the hacienda yard.
Except for two individuals that were shot as they foraged in early evening, our specimens were captured in mist nets stretched over water or as described below.
Other individuals of this species were observed as theyforaged over large pools formed at high tide near the mouth of the stream.
It was captured in a mist net as it foraged over a small stream that supported relatively well-developed gallery forest along the bank.
Individuals from both localities were shot at dusk as they foraged among trees in the valley of the river.
Ten such bulky insects now foraged busily for grubs within the ancestral home, while the founder of the colony had grown draggled and wingless with the passing of time.
Three or four minims, little ants barely six inches long, foragedindustriously among the bits.
Bananas, foraged from the bush, were served, cooked and raw, a dozen different ways, each one of which he declared was better than any other.
Wild tomatoes, which had gone to seed or been remorselessly hoed out from the beginning of Berande, were foraged for salads, soups, and sauces.
Nighthawks of this species were seen regularly at Camp 1, where we flushed them from alkaline flats in the day and heard them calling as they foraged over the dunes in late afternoon.
Two birds in worn winter plumage were taken as they foraged together at the edge of the laguna near Camp 2 on July 9.
And the country was full of potatoes, cabbages, and turnips, on which we foraged with great liberality.
They foraged during the day for apples, chickens, butter, or whatever they could find to eat.
The negroes foraged for their masters wherever they went, and in times of short rations they were quite an adjunct to the Commissary Department, gathering chickens, butter, flour, etc.
Ten bulky insects now foraged busily to feed their grubs within the ancestral home, while the founder of the colony had grown draggled and wingless with the passing of time.
There were dozens of the things within a quarter-mile, hundreds within a mile, and thousands upon thousands within the area the tribe normally foraged in.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "foraged" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.