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Re: Roosting Barn Swallows

Subject: Re: Roosting Barn Swallows
From: "Suzanne Williams" scw1217
Date: Sun Jun 1, 2008 12:13 pm ((PDT))
Amazing.  They sound deafening through my ear phones.  I admire
anyone who gets up that early and sits that long for recording!

---------------------------------------------
Suzanne
Suzanne Williams Photography
http://web.tampabay.rr.com/swilli41/www
Florida, USA



--- In  Kevin Colver <>
wrote:
>
> > There has been some talk of observing behavior while we're out
> > recording.  Here's a little tidbit I observed this month:
>
> > A 30 second sample of over 2 hours of Barn Swallow roost
recordings
> > is linked below.
>
> > http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Naturerecording/files/Barn%
20Swallows%
> > 20in%20the%20Bullrushes.mp3
>
>
> >   I was recording all night at Fish Springs NWR in western UT
and
> > decided to move away from the noisy bullfrogs and find a new
spot
> > to await dawn.  At 1 AM the spot was quiet.  At about 3 AM, under
a
> > full moon, the bullrushes in front of my mic seemed to bubble
over
> > with the chatter of Barn Swallows.  This went on constantly
until
> > about 5 AM when they all took flight and started the day
feasting
> > on the mosquitos that were feasting on me.  I've watched
swallows
> > roosting in barns and other structures in the past but never in
a
> > patch of reeds one meter tall.
>
> Well, I'd discovered a new behavior, or so I thought.  Looking up
the
> subject in the Birds of North America, I discovered that this
marsh
> roosting behavior was described over 100 years ago.  "During
> premigratory periods in late summer, migration, and winter, birds
> often gather in large roosts to sleep in marsh vegetation;
assemble
> over a roost site before landing, forming in some cases dense
clouds
> that gradually circle lower and lower until birds finally start
> dropping down to perch, with many birds flushing and repeating the
> performance before finally settling for the night (Bates 1895)."
So,
> this wasn't anything new to science but was a lucky find for me to
> stumble on a roost site out in hundreds of acres of wetlands, in
the
> middle of the night.
>
> Sure, it's a common bird, no big deal.  But it was fun, and when I
> think about it, that's why I'm out there recording, to have some
> fun.  Hope you're all having a great time in the field.  Enjoy.
>
> Kevin Colver
>
> PS  I posted a photo of the site and my new little Sony PCM D1 out
> there recording the sunrise.  He's hiding in a homemade fluffy
> windscreen cover my wife created.
>
> There is nothing special I can see about this location that tells
me
> why the swallows picked it for the night.  The refuge is big.  I
wish
> I could have checked the spot out over several days to see if they
> move or pick the same location each night.
>
> http://tech.ph.groups.yahoo.com/group/naturerecordists/photos/view/
> c363?b=3D1
>
>
>
>
>
>
>





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