Thanks Geo. There is a fairly close example in the Sibley app - 6th file for
DEJU (Kevin Colver recoded in Utah.)
Bob
> On Apr 1, 2024, at 6:47 PM, Geo Kloppel wrote:
>
> In addition to their familiar trills, delivered all at one pace and pitch,
> Dark-eyed Juncos do have a two part song
In addition to their familiar trills, delivered all at one pace and pitch,
Dark-eyed Juncos do have a two part song that can suggest Song Sparrow. You can
find examples in some of the field guide apps.
-Geo
> On Apr 1, 2024, at 5:30 PM, Laura Stenzler wrote:
>
> Pretty sure it’s a junco.
Pretty sure it’s a junco.
Laura
Laura Stenzler
l...@cornell.edu
On Apr 1, 2024, at 5:16 PM, Ken Haas wrote:
I heard that same call ( the 10:25AM one) on Saturday up at the Visitor
Center at Montezuma and it registered to my mind as the dawn song of the
Blue-winged Warbler. But way to
I heard that same call ( the 10:25AM one) on Saturday up at the Visitor Center
at Montezuma and it registered to my mind as the dawn song of the Blue-winged
Warbler. But way to early. So, I did my best to stack it down and it changed
it’s song as I got closer and started sounding more like a
Three hours after the first recording, at 1:30pm, I heard another strange song at the same corner (just across the road):https://www.facebook.com/share/v/KHo3FA2wqLxtFaQa/?mibextid=K35XfPFor this one I did locate the singer, which was indeed a Dark-eyed Junco, seemingly pretending to be a Song
Dark eyed junco is my thought.
Laura
Laura Stenzler
l...@cornell.edu
On Apr 1, 2024, at 1:08 PM, Suan Yong wrote:
This was singing this morning at 10:30 in Varna at the intersection of the
Dryden Rail Trail and Mt Pleasant Road: