French Birdsong

Discussion forum for getting a butterfly identified.
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Charles Nicol
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Joined: Mon May 14, 2007 12:57 pm
Location: Cambridge

French Birdsong

Post by Charles Nicol »

https://www.flickr.com/photos/captainca ... 38567@N24/

there seem to be two birds singing... one is a chirpy type; the other is more churring

any ideas please ?

from Aude France.
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bugboy
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Joined: Mon Dec 01, 2014 6:29 pm
Location: London

Re: French Birdsong

Post by bugboy »

I can only hear one on the clip, the repetitive single note chirp which if I heard on my local patch I would put it down as a Willow Warbler/Chiffchaff. I think the choice of suspects would be somewhat larger where you are though.
Some addictions are good for the soul!
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Charles Nicol
Posts: 1603
Joined: Mon May 14, 2007 12:57 pm
Location: Cambridge

Re: French Birdsong

Post by Charles Nicol »

bugboy wrote:I can only hear one on the clip, the repetitive single note chirp which if I heard on my local patch I would put it down as a Willow Warbler/Chiffchaff. I think the choice of suspects would be somewhat larger where you are though.
thanks for those suggestions bugboy :D

the recording is not of the best :roll:

Charles

8)
John Chapple
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Joined: Mon Aug 01, 2011 8:55 pm

Re: French Birdsong

Post by John Chapple »

Hi Charles,
I have heard very similar calls to this in Spain and once in my home county of Cornwall. they turned out to be Nightingales. As you may know they have a massive repertoire of calls including whistles and churrs. They only sing for a month or so, then, once paired up they become much more stealthy, and just use contact calls. This is what I think you have recorded. By the look of the thick bush the calls are coming from it seems perfect Nightingale habitat.

All the best
John
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Charles Nicol
Posts: 1603
Joined: Mon May 14, 2007 12:57 pm
Location: Cambridge

Re: French Birdsong

Post by Charles Nicol »

John Chapple wrote:Hi Charles,
I have heard very similar calls to this in Spain and once in my home county of Cornwall. they turned out to be Nightingales. As you may know they have a massive repertoire of calls including whistles and churrs. They only sing for a month or so, then, once paired up they become much more stealthy, and just use contact calls. This is what I think you have recorded. By the look of the thick bush the calls are coming from it seems perfect Nightingale habitat.

All the best
John
merci John !!

i am sure that your suggestion is correct. the only other churring candidate would be the nightjar ( which i have seen nearby ) but i am sure you are right.

8) 8)

Charles
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