pameladean: (Default)
pameladean ([personal profile] pameladean) wrote2020-05-22 04:37 pm

Catbirds

So it's finally spring, and for the last several weeks robins, house finches, bluejays, and cardinals have been singing and calling. The chickadees are weirdly silent and I'm a bit worried about them, but we did hear demands for "cheeseburger, cheeseburger, cheeseburger" earlier in the year.

The robins have been very actively singing. For the last week or so, I've heard one that didn't sound like the others. I began to wonder. Eventually, while still related to a robin's song, it just went completely over the top like a highly operatic rendition of a simple folk song. A day or so after that, I heard in the gloaming the high thin cry of, no, not a Siamese cat, but a gray catbird.

This morning at dawn I was awakened by Saffron's abrupt exit from under the quilt, or else by a very loud buzzy trilly song with melodious intervals that went on, with variations and possibly from at least two different sources, for at least an hour. The catbirds had finished their training and were prepared to perform concerts. They have been doing this intermittently all day. There was a brief period in which cardinals, like hawkers at the intermission of an Elizabethan play, cried, "What cheer?" for a while. But then the catbirds began again.

They seemed to be right on my bedroom windowsill, and the cats absolutely thought so too. Invisibility not being a known trait of catbirds, though they are skilled at yelling at you from dense shrubbery, I stared out the window until I saw movement in the ash tree across our neighbor to the north's back yard, and then got out the binoculars. Yes! Catbird!

We have had a single catbird before, and I always welcome it. I wonder how many there are this year.

Here are some images of a gray catbird, though the ones we get here seldom have a red patch under their tails:

https://www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/Gray_Catbird/id

And here are some sound files:

https://www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/Gray_Catbird/sounds

The first file, of the catbird song, is not unlike our catbirds, though ours have more robin in them at the moment. For the cat cry, the call recorded in New York is most like ours. I was startled by some of the others, which were less Siamese and more pure meow.

I was going to add a robin's song for comparison, but none of the ones I could find was as melodious and meditative as the ones we have in my neighborhood.

Pamela
kore: (Default)

[personal profile] kore 2020-05-22 10:12 pm (UTC)(link)
The catbirds had finished their training and were prepared to perform concerts. They have been doing this intermittently all day. There was a brief period in which cardinals, like hawkers at the intermission of an Elizabethan play, cried, "What cheer?" for a while. But then the catbirds began again.

This is just lovely.

I think we have -- sparrows, chickadees (dee - dee -dee, one of the first bird calls I learned to recognize in NM), starlings, robins, seagulls, crows, pigeons, and a little guy on our old iron fire escape with a peach-pink head -- no idea what he was.
asakiyume: (bluebird)

[personal profile] asakiyume 2020-05-22 10:13 pm (UTC)(link)
I love how cheerfully they'll attempt to imitate other birds! They aren't as accomplished as mockingbirds, but they don't let that stand in the way of a good concert!

My biggest delight this spring has been to notice a redstart in our lilac and apple trees. I used to look at pictures of them in my Herbert Zim Golden Bird Guide as a little kid, and the American redstart was so fancy! I had no idea how tiny they are--small like warblers (I thought they were more oriole sized).
graydon: (Default)

[personal profile] graydon 2020-05-22 10:18 pm (UTC)(link)
Yay, catbirds!

It's not especially melodious here but there was, late last night, a red fox darting across the lawn.
kore: (Default)

[personal profile] kore 2020-05-22 10:30 pm (UTC)(link)
A finch! Maybe that is it. Suppoesdly there were flocks of wild parrots in Ballard, altho we never saw any when we were there. https://parkways.seattle.gov/2014/03/25/peru-natives-make-annual-trip-to-seward-park/

I totally love starlings. I love how they imitate sounds and their swizzle-stick goofy call and their pretty pretty feathers. T swears there's one in our neighbourhood that does car alarms.
asakiyume: (definitely definitely)

[personal profile] asakiyume 2020-05-22 10:31 pm (UTC)(link)
That's exactly what they sound like! Wheezy like that!
minoanmiss: A detail of the Ladies in Blue fresco (Lady in Blue)

[personal profile] minoanmiss 2020-05-22 10:35 pm (UTC)(link)
This is so EVOCATIVE. I can HEAR THEM. OMG eeeeee!
athenais: (Default)

[personal profile] athenais 2020-05-22 10:44 pm (UTC)(link)
What a beautiful song! We don't get them in the west. They don't travel over the Rockies, I guess.
graydon: (Default)

[personal profile] graydon 2020-05-22 10:45 pm (UTC)(link)
It was indeed excellent! (as well as a comprehensive startlement.)

They're hard to see; there could be five across the lawn every night, and I'd still have that exact few seconds to be in the right place to look up. (I am thinking back to tracks in the snow and thinking it might be most nights, if not five foxes.)
sartorias: (Default)

[personal profile] sartorias 2020-05-22 11:49 pm (UTC)(link)
How lovely, all those birds!
sovay: (Silver: against blue)

[personal profile] sovay 2020-05-23 01:32 am (UTC)(link)
There was a brief period in which cardinals, like hawkers at the intermission of an Elizabethan play, cried, "What cheer?" for a while. But then the catbirds began again.

Prrrrt.

I was startled by some of the others, which were less Siamese and more pure meow.

This is so cool!
athenais: (Default)

[personal profile] athenais 2020-05-23 06:46 am (UTC)(link)
We do, indeed. They don't sing as prettily, though.
graydon: (Default)

[personal profile] graydon 2020-05-23 12:53 pm (UTC)(link)
In the statistical abstract, fox tracks will have individual paw prints that are longer than wide (where dog tracks will be at least as wide as long, and might be wider than long), the toes are arranged so the nails are all pointing fore-and-aft, and the distance of the prints from the sagittal plane is less than it is with dogs (though not zero or nearly zero) as it is with cats. And generally prints will be on the small side, compared to domestic dogs; fourteen kilos/thirty pounds is as large as red foxes get.

All of this is pretty darn vague; my take on the tracks in the winter was some confusion, because they didn't look like cat tracks, but who would be walking their dog from my back yard to my front hard in the middle of the night? They were obviously not right for a coyote; too small. I didn't think of foxes until I actually saw one, and the light bulb came on.
minnehaha: (Default)

[personal profile] minnehaha 2020-05-23 02:11 pm (UTC)(link)
Well, heck yes.

You have enthused about catbirds before, and I have wondered idly how come I know nothing about catbirds. Without, of course, lifting a finger to do the simple work of finding out for myself.

So this post was a real delight for me. I'll be listening for the catbird now. I have seen a bare few chickadees this year; it's not just you. The house finches are nesting on our deck like they always do, and this year we have a robin. She has set herself up so that we can see into the nest from windows. V. exciting. B. was taking pix with his long lens.

I'm also enjoying the orioles flashing their bright colors around. They like the linden tree in the neighbor's yard and I think they visit her feeders, but I don't know what she offers.

K.
julian: Picture of the sign for Julian Street. (Default)

[personal profile] julian 2020-05-27 12:42 pm (UTC)(link)
I belieeeve I met a catbird on my walk the day before yesterday. This was near a local lake, further into the woods. For awhile I thought it was a thrush, but they're very different shapes. Also, this one has the brown cap.



I also love how this one fluffed itself up.

Edited 2020-05-27 12:42 (UTC)