Birdsong
Author
Discussion

CoolHands

Original Poster:

22,492 posts

219 months

Is it much more prevalent this year or I have I just not been noticing previously?

I am doing more walking so it could be me, but seems to be an incredible number of birds and chicks in hedgerows at the moment. I love it.

Does it reduce in other parts of the year? (ie is it because of chicks we get it so much? so later there will be less anyway)

Cow Corner 2.0

53 posts

4 months

We’re coming into the period of the year when the birds are most active, so not too surprising.

I spend a lot of time outside but am still taken aback each year by the spring birdsong, it’s a wonderful thing.

We always have a lot of birds in our garden, but the numbers feel particularly strong this year - but it could just be me noticing it more after the long winter!


Dr Mike Oxgreen

4,441 posts

189 months

This is the time of year when birds are vigorously defending their territories and pairings, and singing is a big part of that.

So birdsong at this time of year roughly translates as: Oi, fk off out of my garden! and You see her over there, she s MY bird - if I catch you even looking at my bird I ll peck your fking eyes out!

It goes much quieter in late summer onwards, when most species have finished breeding.

I try to learn at least one new birdsong every year. For some reason I hadn t realised until this year that one of the loudest songs comes from one of the smallest birds - the wren. Unbelievable how loud they are!

Many birds can vocalise when breathing in as well as breathing out, and some have a system of air sacs (a bit like bagpipes) that allow them to keep singing even while they re topping up their lungs. That s how even small birds can produce quite long songs without stopping for breath.

Without a doubt my favourite is the blackbird. Complex and tuneful enough to be interesting, but not so complex as to be overwhelming. It is just about slow enough that I can hear and process it, and I can identify the male who sings in my garden by the unique phrases that he uses. I can even track an individual bird over 2 or 3 years as he matures and his song gets a little bit richer and more diverse each year, until he presumably dies and is replaced by another individual with a whole new repertoire. Robin song is not entirely dissimilar, but it’s too fast for me to process.

Edited by Dr Mike Oxgreen on Sunday 26th April 14:27

jeremyc

27,321 posts

308 months

I can recommend the (free) Merlin Bird ID app for identifying birds from their calls (or appearance).

It's a great help in understanding what is around you, and in better learning to identify calls.

normalbloke

8,557 posts

243 months

jeremyc said:
I can recommend the (free) Merlin Bird ID app for identifying birds from their calls (or appearance).

It's a great help in understanding what is around you, and in better learning to identify calls.
This.

blueg33

45,259 posts

248 months

Busy time of year. In two minutes yesterday I heard: Willow Warbler, Chiff Chaff, Great Tit, Blue Tit, Chaffinch, Robin, Rook, woodpecker

Palmela

797 posts

8 months

I'd endorse the recommendation for the Merlin app; it's really good at identifying birds from the song.

I love the sound of birds on walks or in the garden.

Geo900

20 posts

I'd say the dawn chorus is virtually non-existent compared to what it used to be.

I've been walking through the same woodland for over 20 years, at one time the dawn chorus was an absolute cacophony of noise, you could barely pick out and identify any individual bird calls or songs amongst the racket, but now all you can hear is just a few individual birds singing.

S100HP

13,620 posts

191 months

I noticed it whilst lying in bed the other morning about 0530 as the sun came up. Really loud. I just lay there and enjoyed it. Something magical about it that I'd not really noticed before. Maybe I'm just getting old.

Magic919

14,220 posts

225 months

I like the Merlin app. Turns out it’s a gateway drug and I moved on to Birdnet-Go. Then integrated it with Home Assistant.

CoolHands

Original Poster:

22,492 posts

219 months

By the way, not the same as real life but this recording of birdsong in a British wood is fantastic if you need to hear some eg at night or feeling stressed


omniflow

3,645 posts

175 months

I downloaded the Merlin app when we were on holiday in Tuscany as I wanted to identify the type of bird making a very distinctive noise in the early evening. We spent a couple of hours wrestling with the app and had absolutely no luck in getting it to identify the bird.

We found out a couple of days later that it was a toad.

.:ian:.

2,818 posts

227 months

I set a up a Pi running birdnet in the shed with the mic dnagled out the window, 98% Corvids laugh mostly because there are a lot nearby and they are very loud.
I often whip out my phone when walking the dog, you soon learn the difference between stone chats and chiff chaff and yellowhammers.

CoolHands

Original Poster:

22,492 posts

219 months

Tell you what the invasion of the Australian parrots by whatever idiots let them loose in this country is a real shame. They’re noisy and now breeding.

Captain Smerc

3,282 posts

140 months

The parrots have been here since the 70's or earlier..

blueg33

45,259 posts

248 months

Geo900 said:
I'd say the dawn chorus is virtually non-existent compared to what it used to be.

I've been walking through the same woodland for over 20 years, at one time the dawn chorus was an absolute cacophony of noise, you could barely pick out and identify any individual bird calls or songs amongst the racket, but now all you can hear is just a few individual birds singing.
Dawn chorus here is deafening! Gloucestershire Cotswolds village.

nordboy

3,011 posts

74 months

I moved late last year and our new garden is surrounded on all 3 sides by woodland, then fields behind. I'm really enjoying sitting out and listening to the birds. Highest number of different birds was 19 in under 15 mins, which I was pretty impressed with. That was using the Merlin app.

FarmyardPants

4,317 posts

242 months

jeremyc said:
I can recommend the (free) Merlin Bird ID app for identifying birds from their calls (or appearance).

It's a great help in understanding what is around you, and in better learning to identify calls.
My wife and her friend were using something similar a while back, so I snuck upstairs and played the call of a blue footed booby out the window.

Unfortunately her app only identified European birds frown

Kwackersaki

1,662 posts

252 months

CoolHands said:
By the way, not the same as real life but this recording of birdsong in a British wood is fantastic if you need to hear some eg at night or feeling stressed

That’s a great find. Love that.

My favourite are skylarks. A real sound of summer when walking in fields.

rossub

5,611 posts

214 months

omniflow said:
I downloaded the Merlin app when we were on holiday in Tuscany as I wanted to identify the type of bird making a very distinctive noise in the early evening. We spent a couple of hours wrestling with the app and had absolutely no luck in getting it to identify the bird.

We found out a couple of days later that it was a toad.
laugh

Showed the Mrs and she had a good chuckle too.