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Hoag's House In Baraboo 8:00A.M.
Mar.10,1902
This morning I saw an other large flock of Canada geese. 
[[marginalia]] numbers [[/marginalia]]  I counted them through the Opera glass and there were 74. They were forever changing shape as they flew. [[marginalia]]actions[[/marginalia]] Now all would be in a single line. Then about 2/3 of them would break ranks and fly to the end in a body and form a huge V. Then this would split up into 4 or 5 smaller flocks and these would all unite. Single individuals were never seen alone. The flight was swift and direct. The birds neck were stretched far out in front. 
[[marginalia]]notes [[/marginalia]] They gave notes like [[underline]] honk honk [[/underline]] or [[underline]] conk [[/underline]] and [[underline]] ca a kuk [[/underline]]. The last was trumpetlike. [[marginalia]] weather [[/marginalia]]. They flew north along the valley.  The weather is cloudy and moist.

Transcription Notes:
Margin notes arranged against relevant section in the text. The margin note is effectively a reference to the text, which it seems clear is what Wetmore meant to do.