Jan., 1908 LIFE HISTORY OF THE CALIFORNIA CONDOR. PART II traveled extensively thru Arizona, says, "I regret that I cannot give you any in- formation on the California condor." Mr. George F. Breninger wrote, "I know of no instance of the California condor in Arizona." Mr. O. W. Howard who spent many years in the Huachuca and Chiricahua Mountains of southern Arizona, both of which ranges extend into Mexico, has seen no California condors or found any trace of them. This seems to settle fairly well the southern liniits of the condor's range. We find a few scattered in the San Jacinto Range, which is a small range about forty or fifty miles from the coast extending thru Riverside and San Diego Counties. A few have been noted in the lower end of the San Bernardino Range during recent years. Where the San Gabriel Mountains cut thrn Los Angeles County, condors are a little more numerous, and from this district thruout the mountainous regions of Los Angeles, Ventura, Santa Barbara, San Luis Obispo, and Monterey Counties, the largest number of these birds are found, but they are nowhere common. There have been a few straggling records of the condor north of Monterey County in California, but none of recent date,