Please help me identify this birdsong.

Hi all

I'm new to this forum, so hi!

Could someone please save my sanity and help me identify this birdsong....

http://www.mediafire.com/?m52mmkyn4yy

I've heard this in 2 different places in Somerset, during the past 2 summers.

I can identify a lot of birds by sight and sound, but this one has me stumped.

I have only caught a glimpse of it once, from a distance. It's a small brown bird with an undulating flight (I think).

Thanks in advance

This new forum is dreadful.

  • Hi

    I've had a good listen but the recording is so faint that I can't be 100% sure. However, it sounds like a warbler and coupled with your description of the flight I wonder if it's a whitethroat? The males often sing during a 'dancing' display flight, kind of bouncing in the air a few metres above a favoured stretch of hedgerow. Does that sound like what you saw/heard?

    If you could describe the habitat that might offer another clue...

    Cheer

    Colin

  • Thanks for taking the time to listen and help Colin. It's really appreciated.

    I've listened to the Whitethroat (and Lesser Whitethroat) on the RSPB site, and I don't THINK it's either of them.

    I haven't seen it dance as you describe, because I can never seem to see it very clearly. It's generally hidden away in some very bushy trees. If it IS a Whitethoat, then I should be able to recognise it if I can get a glimpse, as I'm familiar with the look of them.

    As for location I've heard it in 2 places within town, both places are quite urban (housing estate / semi industrial estate/ urban park) along a tree lined brook (in one location I heard it from trees that were approx 20 yards from the brook, the other place the trees directly border the brook/stream). There are open fields next to the trees. This is in Somerset.

    I will try and get a better recording of it if I can.

    This is really starting to frustrate me. I spent most of last summer trying to find out what this bird was, and it only dawned on me this year that I could record it on my phone and ask on here. I'm very close to emailing Bill Oddie or Chris Packham with it. lol.

    As I type this, I can hear the bird in the trees about 30 yards away (can't record it from this distance though). And I certainly can't see it in it's tree cover.

    I also think it's some kind of Warbler, but cannot pinpoint which one. I think I can rule out Reed, Sedge, Willow and Cetti's Warblers as we have lots of those down here, and I'm familiar with their song.

    Thanks again.

    This new forum is dreadful.

  • Anonymous
    0 Anonymous 28/05/2010 02:15 in reply to thegoon

    Hello thegoon

    Welcome to our wonderful world.

    My first ever post to this site was to ask about a bird that sounds very like the one you are trying to identify - a little brown bird with undulating flight. I saw two of them flying along the canal. Colin was also very kind trying to identify it (a sort of warbler, he suggested) but I am still stumped, as I now know it wasn't the usual suspects (reed, sedge or willow warbler). I haven't seen them since, but I am still really curious as to what they were.

    Keep us posted with any sightings!

    Cheers

    Pipit

  • Hi there

    I don't profess to be an expert on this but your description of an undulating flight seems more like a member of the finch family than a warbler. I've listened to the sound and I'm going to (tentatively) suggest a linnet.

    See what you think on the RSPB birds calls and also at this site.

    http://ibc.lynxeds.com/species/eurasian-linnet-carduelis-cannabina

    Probably off the mark but worth a try.

    Regards

    TJ

     

    ____________________________________________________________________

    Tony

    My Flickr Photostream 

  • Hi thegoon welcome to the forum.

    I have listened to your recording and albeit is somewhat distorted, I'm relatively certain the bird is either a Blackcap or Garden Warbler.

    http://www.rspb.org.uk/wildlife/birdguide/name/b/blackcap/index.aspx

    http://www.rspb.org.uk/wildlife/birdguide/name/g/gardenwarbler/index.aspx

    Very similar song.

    If you do have a better recording then I would be able to give you a definitive answer.

    Regards Buzzard

    Nature Is Amazing - Let Us Keep It That Way

  • Thanks very much for your reply.

    I can now confirm that it was indeed a Blackcap. I managed by sheer chance to be in the right place at the right time, as the male Blackcap in question decided to land in a tree right next to me, and sing loudly in full view.

    This new forum is dreadful.

  • Anonymous
    0 Anonymous 01/06/2010 17:42 in reply to thegoon

    Always satisfying when that happens. It's a lovely sweet song, isn't it!

    I shall decide my bird was a Blackcap too as I have seen them in the reeds by the canal where I live.

    Well done thegoon

    Cheers

    Pipit