Bird call identification

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Toddy

Mod
Mod
Jan 21, 2005
38,966
4,616
S. Lanarkshire
Those who know me know I am very deaf. I have lost entire bands of hearing right across where speech is most common. I can't hear my quietly spoken husband and son when they're talking even just across the table from me :sigh:
But, I hear every wee beep and cheep, every bird out there. My world isn't silent, just kind of filtered, sort of. I am becoming usefully good at lip reading :)

Where I live we have trees, lots and lots of trees, and a great many species all close together. We have an impressive array of wildlife for being now so suburban. The range of birds is a constant quiet pleasure :) A starling in full voice is an entire orchestra to it's own wee self :)
Sometimes though, even though I can hear the bird, I don't know what it is, so finding good clear easily heard recognition sites is a good thing :)

This one from the Woodland Trust, for instance :cool:


The recent thread on nuthatches had me looking for them online. They're not common up here, but I thought that they were some kind of upside down, bandit looking, bird. I found them on that site, and have it in mind now that they're the Morse Code bird :)

M
 

Broch

Life Member
Jan 18, 2009
8,053
7,846
Mid Wales
www.mont-hmg.co.uk
The recent thread on nuthatches had me looking for them online. They're not common up here, but I thought that they were some kind of upside down, bandit looking, bird. I found them on that site, and have it in mind now that they're the Morse Code bird :)

M

I know what you mean - too many dit dit dits but definitely recognisable da da das :)
 
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