Originally posted by vinteuil
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What birds (are you/have you been) watching? What birds have been watching you?
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Originally posted by vinteuil View Post'
So LOUD!
I'm a forgiving sort of chap, but a week more of this....
.
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Richard Tarleton
Originally posted by vinteuil View Post
Three o'clock in the morning it seems relentless. In the gardens between these west London terraces we have (to my untrained ears) - chattering magpies - alarm calls of blackbirds (there is a tree with a nest just outside the bedroom window) - the bicycle pump noise of a great tit (I think).
So LOUD!
I'm a forgiving sort of chap, but a week more of this....
.
© The New Yorker
Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostSome years ago, when I was mowing a large lawn, using a petrol-driven mower, I was quite certain that the birds - the blackbirds in particular - were raising their game in order to remain audible above the noise of the machine. I have been told that this can indeed be the case, and that birds in urban areas in general sing louder than they do in the countryside.
© The New Yorker
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Originally posted by Vox Humana View PostDon't worry. It will soon start to tail off. Personally I love it, 3 a.m. or not.
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Originally posted by Richard Tarleton View PostI've always thought of blackbirds as contraltos. Ravens, which we get regularly over the house, are the John Tomlinsons of the bird world.....
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Richard Tarleton
Originally posted by Vox Humana View PostThe late Eric Simms compared the Garden Warbler's song as the contralto to the Blackcap's soprano.. Much as I love and look forward to blackcaps, there's something special about the secretive garden warbler's mellifluous (and continuous) song usually issuing from the middle of a bush, with just the occasional glimpse or twitch of a leaf to give away exactly where they are. Lars Jonsson's "monotonous babbling of soft clear notes" doesn't do justice to how attractive it is, but I do like his painting (but is the bill fractionally too short?). They arrive later than blackcaps, of course, and blackcaps take exception to their presence when they do get here, there being habitat overlaps.
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