Hi again, I thought I had identified a brown-headed honeyeater that has been hanging about my backyard (by sight) but as a result of this conversation I'm not confident of the i.d. What looks like a brown-headed honeyeater but sounds, well, prettier? I've checked the Birds in backyards Mp3s and they aren't of much use.
Alberta Hayes, perplexed in Monash.
On Thu, Oct 15, 2009 at 5:20 PM, Philip Veerman <> wrote:
I am mostly ready to assist people with these questions as are others.
But at the risk of seeming uninspired, I suggest additional
contemplation before asking, as to whether these questions are
answerable on the information given. Maybe trying to imitate the sound
to people at the COG meeting is a better option than trying to type it
I would suggest that a look at the bird would help. A description of a
call could lead to a whole range of things and most importantly,
regardless of the responses we may give, it is still hard to prove
whether the suggestions are correct until the person asking, sees it for
themself - thus solving the problem. Learning from asking is great and
may be quick but learning from following through yourself can be more
satisfying.
For what little it is worth, I'd support Anthony Overs on White-throated
Gerygone also Harvey on Grey Fantail and also throw in Silvereye as a
candidate. I am surprised though at the suggestion of Brown-headed
Honeyeater as they are mostly in mobile flocks and their call is a dull
sound. Either way the question has not advanced a great deal..........
Philip Veerman
24 Castley Circuit
Kambah ACT 2902
02 - 62314041
-----Original Message-----
From: David Nicholls [
Sent: Thursday, 15 October 2009 11:51 AM
Cc: canberra birds
Subject: Newbie bird call ID [SEC=UNCLASSIFIED]
The BiB site mp3 recording makes it sound coarser. This was a whistling
call.
DN
Alberta Hayes wrote:
> *Long shot, but Brown-headed honeyeater?
>
> Alberta Hayes, Monash.
> *White-throated Gerygone
> On Thu, Oct 15, 2009 at 11:32 AM, Perkins, Harvey
> <
> <>> wrote:
>
> Or even a Grey Fantail call could fit the description, depending
on
> interpretation of written notation of bird song...
>
> Harvey
>
>
> *Harvey Perkins*
> CRC Selection Rounds Section
> _______________________________________
> *Department of Innovation, Industry, Science and Research*
>
>
>
>
------------------------------------------------------------------------
> *From:* Anthony Overs [
> <>]
> *Sent:* Thursday, 15 October 2009 11:29 AM
> *To:* David Nicholls
> *Cc:* canberra birds
> *Subject:* Re: [canberrabirds] Newbie bird call ID
>
> White-throated Gerygone might be a candidate, based on the 'pretty
> whistling' and 'cascading' descriptors
>
> Anthony
>
> 2009/10/15 David Nicholls <
> <>>
>
> It was in a thick pittosporum bush/tree in my front garden (or
> possibly in the Silver Birch next to it). I have heard it
> before, but never so close.
>
> I'll have a listen to the bird calls CD tonight and see if I
can
> find it. It was a pretty whistling call, starting simply and
> cascading into a much more complex pattern. The call was
> repeated several times and lasted about 2-3 seconds each
> repeat.
>
> DN
>
> Geoffrey Dabb wrote:
>
> Where did you hear it, David, and what kind of habitat?
(It
> might be the
> neighbour's canary)
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: David Nicholls [
> <>] Sent: Thursday, 15 October
2009
> 10:23 AM
> To:
> <>
> Subject: [canberrabirds] Newbie bird call ID
>
> What bird makes a (loud) high whistling
>
> "chip-chip-chip-cheep-cheep-cheep-deedle-eedle-eedle-eeee"?
>
> If that's intelligible...
>
> Thanks
>
> DN
>
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