No, that's not it. It had a well defined short 'tok' followed by a rapidly
modulated (or corrugated) 'eeeeeeee'. Also, fairly loud.
DN
On 05/11/2012, at 2:00 PM, Charmian Lawson <> wrote:
> Hi Des and David
>
> Your bird call isn't by any chance that of the bronze wing pigeon? It is
> repetitive and monotonous but I guess isn't modulated, but rather the one
> note?:
>
> http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_detailpage&v=wygNi9tXEJc
>
> Otherwise David's description did make me think of the crimson rosellas who
> have differing calls - but David you have ruled them out.
>
> A mystery!
>
> Kind regards
>
> Charmian Lawson
> Holder
>
> -----Original Message----- From: Des Clark-Walker
> Sent: Monday, November 05, 2012 11:24 AM
> To: Canberrabirds List
> Subject: Re: [canberrabirds] Strange bird call ID
>
> I live in Deakin so I can confirm that there was a bird call ,
> possibly the same as heard by David Nicholls ,that I have not heard
> before.
> It was loud, and monotonous. The bird changed location with a call
> at each new position before it flew off. Total time about 2 minutes.
>
> Des Clark-Walker.
>
>
> On 04/11/2012, at 3:07 PM, David Nicholls wrote:
>
>> We have lots of Pied Currawongs around here, and this morning they were
>> calling their usual calls at the same time as the (tok)eeee bird. I have
>> never heard the new call before. Pied C's have a variety of calls, but for
>> the ones I know, the notes are always "smooth" - ie not modulated (fast
>> vibrato, if you like).
>>
>> DN
>>
>> On 04/11/2012, at 2:04 PM, Julian Teh <> wrote:
>>
>>> Hi David,
>>> Sounds like one of the pied currawong calls. Can anyone correct/ confirm?
>>> Cheers
>>> Julian Teh
>>> Sent from My iPad
>>>
>>> On 04/11/2012, at 2:01 PM, David Nicholls <> wrote:
>>>
>>>> This morning (ca. 9am) a bird I've not heard here before (western Deakin)
>>>> called a dozen or so times, flew to a nearby location, called again
>>>> twice, then flew further off, calling again a few times.
>>>>
>>>> The call can best be described as "(tok)eeeeee". The 'tok' is a soft
>>>> precursor and at a lower pitch to a rapidly modulated "eeee". The
>>>> calls were slightly less than 1 second apart. Not a Crimson Rosella,
>>>> which, while they do make similar noises, have pure notes and not the
>>>> modulated "eeee".
>>>>
>>>> Can anyone suggest what calls I might listen to, to confirm the identity
>>>> of the caller?
>>>>
>>>> Thanks
>>>>
>>>> DN
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