Birdsong Serenades

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Birdsong Serenades

Immerse yourself in birdsong, one species at a time. Each episode features long-form recordings focused on a single study species. Episodes will even be updated from time to time, to add even more recordings. Recordings are primarily of species present in the Great Lakes region of North America. Created, recorded, narrated by Rob Porter. Cover Art (American Redstart) by Lauren Helton: https://tinylongwing.carbonmade.com/

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    Wood Thrush (Hylocichla mustelina)

    This episode will focus on the Wood Thrush. You may notice a bit of a tweak to the format of this series, it’s something new I’d like to try, and if feedback is positive I’d like to begin re-releasing episodes with the newer format. For feedback, as always you can contact me through Patreon, Discord, or email rob [at] songbirding.com. It’s late June, and you’re on an evening hike through a deciduous forest. The birdsongs are less dense, more subdued at this time of day, and this next species’ song fits right in with that lazy late evening mood. Peer-o-lay-dee! The Wood Thrush has a slow, flute-like melody. It is the quintessential relaxed, chilled sounding birdsong. And in my experience, this is a species that stands out more in the evening, not necessarily because it is more active leading up to dusk, but because it is just as active as any other time of day. Hermit Thrush and Eastern Wood-Pewee are like this as well, for example. In contrast, any given warbler or sparrow species will be likely be less active than they are in the morning. Being a forest thrush species, these birds are more earthen in colour tones, and in the case of the Wood Thrush spend their time on the ground feeding, but also perch in the lower canopy of a forest when singing, treating the forest as their own personal auditorium as their song echoes far and wide. They are not the only thrush to sound so calming. The Hermit Thrush could also be argued to be also a very calm, lazy sounding song. This is where the mnemonics can come in handy, comparing the Wood Thrush’s flutelike peer-o-lay-dee vs the Hermit Thrush’s less describable flurry of notes. Memorizing this distinction is not easy though… especially considering you’re only likely to hear these species’ songs through a quarter of the year, and that’s assuming you live somewhere that you might have regular access to both of these species. When hearing one of these two after 8 or 9 months of not hearing either, one could not be blamed for readily misidentifying these songs. For more Hermit Thrush songs to compare with, there is previous Birdsong Serenades episode with extensive recordings to compare with. An upcoming episode will have a mix of both, so you may contrast and compare these two songful thrushes. Credits Birdsong Serenades is recorded, engineered, narrated and created by Rob Porter.

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Immerse yourself in birdsong, one species at a time. Each episode features long-form recordings focused on a single study species. Episodes will even be updated from time to time, to add even more recordings. Recordings are primarily of species present in the Great Lakes region of North America. Created, recorded, narrated by Rob Porter. Cover Art (American Redstart) by Lauren Helton: https://tinylongwing.carbonmade.com/

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