Jared,

 

Glad you made this post as it is a sure sign Spring is around the corner with 
all the birds firing up their singing voices.  We’ve had an immature Harris’s 
at our place in southwest Denver (Athmar Park Neighborhood, Denver Co.) all 
winter and he (?) is really starting to stretch his pipes lately.  He would 
occasionally throw out a typically grabbled “Zonotrichian” song on nice days 
the past few months (here since November), but lately is starting to find his 
inner Harris’s with the plaintive monotone notes of the full song beginning to 
take shape.  It’s been fun hearing him learn and will definitely miss him when 
he finally gets good enough to head home to impress the girls (again, assuming 
it is a dude).

 

Thanks again for your post, very interesting.

 

Good Birding Listening,

Doug

Denver

 

From: [email protected] <[email protected]> On Behalf Of Nathan 
Pieplow
Sent: Monday, March 8, 2021 1:55 PM
To: Jared Del Rosso <[email protected]>
Cc: Colorado Birds <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [cobirds] Sparrow Song Mystery - Arapahoe

 

Hi Jared,

 

Yes, Harris's Sparrows can sing quite a bit this time of year. Like the other 
Zonotrichias they build up to it gradually over the course of the winter. I 
might not rule out a White-throated Sparrow, but Harris's is a distinct 
possibility especially if all the whistles were on the same pitch.

 

Nathan Pieplow

Boulder

 

On Mon, Mar 8, 2021 at 1:50 PM Jared Del Rosso <[email protected] 
<mailto:[email protected]> > wrote:

Yesterday, while wandering around my Centennial yard in the morning, I heard a 
sparrow sing a 3 or 4 note song of clear whistles. The bird stayed out of view 
the entire time and got ever farther away. It reminded me of the clear, strong 
notes opening a White-throated Sparrow's song. But it sounded most like the 
Harris's Sparrow's song. 


Has anyone encountered a Harris's Sparrow clearly singing its song this time of 
year, rather than giving the jumbled mess that I've heard a younger bird give a 
few springs ago? Or are White-throated Sparrow giving partial songs? (But it 
didn't seem right for that, as it didn't seem like much of a melody. Just a few 
repetitive notes). Or might be a different bird yet?

There are juncos and towhees around, making all kinds of weird noises and 
partial songs. This was distinct, cleaner, and sweeter in sound.

 

- Jared Del Rosso

Centennial, CO

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