I feel that there are decibels in bird calls that carry much farther than a human imitation. This recording carries far enough to quiet the birds on 2 acres, as they listen😂
Theres a bird in washington state that youll hear in the mountain area. It sounds like a person doing a long whistle and thats it. Idk what it is but its a very unique sound compared to the other birds and no other birds seem to sing near them
I think it's because there are comparably so few of them now.Starling and grackle population growth have outstripped most of the once ordinary native bird species birds
NO WAY! Its been almost 15 years since I've heard this specific bird that I love, and I stopped procrastinating today and figured it out after 20 minutes of going through videos. #18 the MOURNING DOVE!
The birds in my yard love it when I play this. It's actually attracted new species of birds to my yard. Some of the calls I've never heard before playing this. Now I hear the same calls from my treetops. Cool!
I love this video and play it every day to the birds in my yard. Since playing this, we now have every species of bird in the video visiting our feeder! Real cool!
Haha. I loved. But it got my attention that my Chihuahua dog was listening really careful almost as Staring by the window listening And listening like she could understand that the Birds was singing amazing beautiful . Animals. Do know. Aww Our God is awesome to delight us. With these BEUTIFUL little birds! Thank you 🇵🇷♥️
Hey thanks ! I didn't hear the bird call I was looking for but this was really a fun and educational format. I listen via bluetooth to my echo and my cat was looking all around the shelf it's on. Silly cat!
At age 58, a friend and I rode bicycles from Maine to Washington state. Living in Western Washington we do not have mourning doves and we also thought they were owls. I love that sound and it brings back memories from our trip. Due to climate change we now have ring neck doves but they just don't have the same haunting call as a mourning dove.
LOVE that you have the Final Fantasy X victory theme at 9:10 for the credits and thank you. The video was definitely a victory! That made it for me, it is my favorite of the series.
What a wonderful video! :) My eyes are not very good, so I cannot be a bird WATCHER. But thanks to your video I can be a bird LISTENER and learn to identify the birds around me by their calls. Thank you for a wonderful video tutorial !
I've been hearing #18 most of my life and no one I knew could tell me that they heard it too, or what bird made that noise. People kept thinking owl, but that wasn't a freakin owl. Thank god I found this video.
In the first 6 birds here, I've happily stumbled upon the very yard birds we have in our area of Western North Carolina. Also the sparrows, woodpecker, titmouse, mourning dove, mockingbird and others. The song of Carolina Wren is one of my very earliest memories as a toddler. Also the ubiquitous bob white, which sadly was gone by the time I was about halfway to adulthood. Now we gratefully have wild turkeys from a Biltmore Estate re-breeding program as well as one of my most favorites, the turkey buzzards. Unfortunately we also now have predatory hawks (and coytes) from out West, which no one ever dreamed would migrate to our region! Hawks sadly eat songbirds I hear, so I'm not fond of them anymore. This video is truly wonderful. Thank you so much!
A crow on my terrace has driven himself nuts looking for the source of the birdcalls. Now even the ones a lil far away have picked up on the noise. I basically started a ripple effect for the birds in my locality.
So simple but what a great idea! The songs/calls before naming the bird. Great learning tool. All the tapes on the market that I know give you the name of the bird and then the song, so it's not in a quiz form like yours. This way it's more like a test and we do have to study to guess the bird.
@@gottabighit1 the word 'ain't' isn't "improper grammar." The only thing they didn't do is put a semicolon after 'birds.' And Hayden 1 is correct. The deity described in the bible isn't, nor could it be, real. There is zero empirical evidence of any deity's existence, in fact.
I heard quite a few birds around my house, being in South Carolina with my mom, such as the Bluejay, Cardinal, and the wren and #14 I thought was the flicker, but it's a Red-Bellied Woodpecker...
Cool! I was hearing this bird just now out in our yard and at #32, wasn't thinking I was going to find it - but then the LAST one! Northern Mockingbird! COOL DEAL! HI just put my speaker in my window to see if I could get him to react. Well he did! I saw him take off from our tree! I don't know what the one in this video was saying - but my local bird wasn't having any of it!
Mike R. There was a mockingbird at one place where I lived that would meow like a cat. I puzzled over that damned cat half the summer. Bird laughed at me using my own laughter before I figured it out. He had quite the repertoire. I hope I never forget that.
I have always enjoyed watching birds - and so do my 2 indoor cats! I live in an Atlanta suburb and currently have several pairs of goldfinches feeding at my feeders (they decimated my large sunflower plant a month ago but it's making a comeback after I fed it). I also have a pair of brown thrashers, mourning doves, house sparrows, house finches, cardinals, nuthatches, towhees and chickadees. The nuthatches are one of my favorites as very friendly, curious and acrobatic. They will dive bomb my patio feeders and come within 6 inches of me when I'm reading on my patio, stare and buzz-buzz at me - then fly off! They don't seem afraid of me whatsoever. Bird watching is so entertaining - my 2 cats, Tia & Chloe, heartily agree and know the drill, lying low, flattening their ears against their head and peering just above the bottom frame of the patio doors. They've got it down!
It's amazing you sit outside in the yard a hear a certain bird call and jokingly try to imitate it and get close to matching the sound but failed to know it's name until you watch this video and recognize the bird call and are told the name.
I love this birdsong test! I would like to hear more warblers because I can't identify all of them yet. Having the video of each of them is great, too. I love birds! I have several kinds of feeders and I supply several kinds of seeds to them ! C.H, Lebanon,Pa.
I normally play this video to lure my cat inside once it is too dark for her to be out and I've never finished it before today. That end music took me by surprise lmao
Ugh I can't find this cool-sounding bird call I've been hearing every morning since the start of Spring. I want to know what it is! All I can say is I live in Minnesota and it sounds like it's coming from a small backyard bird... Update: Apparently I didn't watch the whole video because it was the Mourning Dove whose call I was hearing!
You can go on this website called Cornell Lab of Ornithology and listen to bird calls. They have most North American birds. To find it you can type in any bird name and type "song" or "call" next to it. The website is the one titled "all about birds".
Some suggestions: Red-winged Blackbird Field Sparrow House Wren Eastern Phoebe Ruby-crowned or Golden-crowned Kingletl Blue-gray Gnatcatcher Thrush species, such as Veery, Hermit, or Swainson's Gray Catbird or Brown Thrasher (sound similar to mockingbird) Cedar Waxwing Warbler Species (many kinds, all a bit similar) Ovenbird Scarlet Tanager Balitmore Oriole Chipping Sparrow, Swamp Sparrow Rose-breasted Grosbeak Indigo Bunting Brown-headed Cowbird Cardinals also make quite a few sounds, more than just in the video
there are probably half a dozen or more of these birds right in my neighborhood... when hubby and i used to go fishing/camping a lot, i always wondered what birds were making which sounds... now i know. thanks for this video. i love the mourning dove call... always wondered if that was an owl making that sound :)
Thank you. A bird was singing outside New York City apartment at 3:45 a. I recorded it and thanks to your video managed to identify it as an american robin or a mockingbird imitating an american robin.
i live in east Texas close go Shreveport we birdwatch and have feeders in our yard. i have seen the blue jays, woodpecker, cardinals,robins,cowbirds,mourning doves,mockingbirds,and recently we have gotten the indigo bunting love all the sounds.
Very useful and enjoyable too! The clarity of the calls and songs is terrific and the photos are excellent.I assume you organized it alphabetically, from the start at least, which is as good a way as any for a non-biologist audience. I knoew I'd heard a woodpecker and had to listen through much of the whole list to get (Northern Flicker I think, beside spring peepers, like your recording) but this is a very MINOR problem. Thanks!
Dogs are cocking head back ,and froth ears up too it's cute . Also a lot of this birds we have in the blue Ridge smocky mountain. Some I know ,and others I heard before, but didn't know there names until now.
Well, this is rather interesting. I came to this page desperate to identify the bird sound associated with the beautiful sound of this bird, which was singing by my window this morning, but I could not find it at all. The reason why I have become so interested about it is because a year ago, I loss my son. After he passed the way, I was so desperate to find a way of communicating with him. So, I ended up visiting a medium. Well, since I am a bit skeptical about things like that, I had a hard time believing what she had said me about him visiting in a form of a bird. It is funny because it all really coincides. My son loved birds a lot as well. My son told me through her that he would communicate with me by the sound of a bird. But since I have many birds by the area where I live, I could not really differ which one that would be. However, there is this beautiful sound of this bird that I have tried to imitate for the longest time, and the presence of that bird, has become more obvious, more prolonged, and frequent by my house. It will serenade me for hours by itself. However, the proof that this is actually my son talking to me is that the other night, I could not fall asleep, and around 02:00 am, there is this lonely bird singing close by my window. Now, I am convinced that it is my son singing to me, but I want to find the face of this bird associated to this beautiful, yet so melancholic, and enchanting sound.
#29 shows the bird, but doesn't give what it's called. I was disappointed that this doesn't include the eastern whip-poor-will, or the bobwhite quail, which we hear so often here in central Illinois. I recognized the northern cardinal, the American crow, blue jays, tufted titmouse, especially! They bring back memories of growing up on the farm. I could hear many of these from my bedroom window.
Same here. I hear it a lot here in GA, but I don't think I've seen it. Leaving in a heavily wooded area, I have to use binoculars to see most of the smaller birds.
had no idea there were videos of birds and their songs. Great production. Ive heard many melodies from individual birds. Some even copy others. Ive noticed the california thresher copies one of the mocking birds many melodies (not on this video),Off the top of my head the black bird,mocking bird,and thresher have more than two songs each. I havent been an observer for long,but theres a whole new world out there. I moved from the upper sacramento valley in NCal(east of SF)and now down in the desert/mountains near Joshua Tree Nat Monument,Morongo Valley preserve(near Palm Springs) More wildlife than I would have guessed down here,especially around the many springs . Good job. here. Takes aot of time on your part. Thanks
Mocking birds can be hilarious! When I lived in town, there was one that would perch on the light pole in front of my apartment. I'd heard they'll even make the sound of a siren. Well, I heard it with my own ears. Now I live in the country and there's mocking birds out here. One day it cracked me up. Apparently it had heard someone having trouble trying to start a small engine! lol
@@BiByeBaby LOL. It's just that you aren't really saying anything, so it's a waste of time reading your comment. "Weird" compared to what? What do you think blue jays "should" sound like?? You probably sound "weird" o them also. ;ODD
@@bookguitarguy Heh dude you're replying to a 2 year old comment made by a socially inept 14yo. I swear to god I probably have immeasurable amounts these pointless comments from that time period. I'm well aware that comment adds nothing but an irrelevant opinion. So thanks for pointing that one out ;P
Bee-utiful! Nicely done! Make a version w/ west coast birds. Most of these species live in CA, but the sounds the ones out here make are just a bit different. Again, really good!
I think one of the Red Winged Blackbird calls kind of sounds like what is called a hand shake between two fax machines when they first encounter one another.
Thanks for the condensed encyclopedia of bird calls! Less talk and opinion, pure bird❤
The second the first song stopped playing, some bird a couple yards behind me started singing the exact same song! 😆
was it the white throated sparrow?
I feel that there are decibels in bird calls that carry much farther than a human imitation. This recording carries far enough to quiet the birds on 2 acres, as they listen😂
Theres a bird in washington state that youll hear in the mountain area. It sounds like a person doing a long whistle and thats it. Idk what it is but its a very unique sound compared to the other birds and no other birds seem to sing near them
The amazing great God has blessed us with beauty He is delighting us at every turn! Thank you for the singers Lord
luannemt y7xwmmk
Amen
what makes you think god is a he?
Blue Jay's call is really nostalgic for some reason
Paleozoic Productions Regular Show
Paleozoic Productions... and by ‘nostalgic’ you mean ANNOYING, right? 5 AM! 😫
It sounds weird
I think it's because there are comparably so few of them now.Starling and grackle population growth have outstripped most of the once ordinary native bird species birds
I agree...to me it sounds like clear blue skies, crisp air, falling leaves in the late afternoon.
NO WAY! Its been almost 15 years since I've heard this specific bird that I love, and I stopped procrastinating today and figured it out after 20 minutes of going through videos. #18 the MOURNING DOVE!
Some very cool close-ups, congratulations.
What a dull place it would be without birds God provided us with music from heaven, I live in the country and I wouldn't want it any other way
Still can't find the bird sound I'm looking for
Me neither.
Chances are, it’s a mocking bird. They sometimes mix calls with other sounds & create a strange song.
@@cxxxrose Mockingbirds are very entertaining. I always end up laughing at their unique combinations of song and odd sounds.
Same :(
Just gotta check out the list of the birds that live in your area then search each breed and their sounds.
The birds in my yard love it when I play this. It's actually attracted new species of birds to my yard. Some of the calls I've never heard before playing this. Now I hear the same calls from my treetops. Cool!
Thanks my guy this is going on my playlist
I love this video and play it every day to the birds in my yard. Since playing this, we now have every species of bird in the video visiting our feeder! Real cool!
23 Eastern wood pee-wee
29 Nuthatch
4:25 white throated sparrow
My favorite song is the full repertoire of the wood thrush. So beautiful!
Most enjoyable video and such Accuracy on getting them right!
My mornings have changed and my day starts out on a much less stressful note!
THANKS
Haha. I loved. But it got my attention that my Chihuahua dog was listening really careful almost as Staring by the window listening And listening like she could understand that the Birds was singing amazing beautiful . Animals. Do know. Aww Our God is awesome to delight us. With these BEUTIFUL little birds! Thank you 🇵🇷♥️
Hey thanks ! I didn't hear the bird call I was looking for but this was really a fun and educational format. I listen via bluetooth to my echo and my cat was looking all around the shelf it's on. Silly cat!
Some of the best bird audio I've heard because of the low background noise. Thanks for the high quality.
At age 58, a friend and I rode bicycles from Maine to Washington state. Living in Western Washington we do not have mourning doves and we also thought they were owls. I love that sound and it brings back memories from our trip. Due to climate change we now have ring neck doves but they just don't have the same haunting call as a mourning dove.
As a young child in N Illinois, I used to cry and call them the "Toos" due to their sad call 😊
I started playing this video on my phone and my cat immediately goes hunting for birds lol
my cat looking out the windows - can't find the bird
Just keep him on your own property, because he's not safe near my bird feeders (or those of other bird lovers). Just saying... thanks.
My cat just slept
I think I broke my cat with this! 😆😆😆
lol
I have 2 sets of claw marks on my legs. One cat fled north, one south in terror at the blue jay call!
Mearbear 71 😆😂
@@LM-mn7ll understandable - Bluejays can be mean, LOL!
LOVE that you have the Final Fantasy X victory theme at 9:10 for the credits and thank you.
The video was definitely a victory! That made it for me, it is my favorite of the series.
What a wonderful video! :) My eyes are not very good, so I cannot be a bird WATCHER. But thanks to your video I can be a bird LISTENER and learn to identify the birds around me by their calls. Thank you for a wonderful video tutorial !
I Love Birds even vultures and crows.! 🐦🦉🕊.
I've been hearing #18 most of my life and no one I knew could tell me that they heard it too, or what bird made that noise. People kept thinking owl, but that wasn't a freakin owl. Thank god I found this video.
Super nagrania różnych ptaszków i fantastczne ujęcie zdjęć.
In the first 6 birds here, I've happily stumbled upon the very yard birds we have in our area of Western North Carolina. Also the sparrows, woodpecker, titmouse, mourning dove, mockingbird and others. The song of Carolina Wren is one of my very earliest memories as a toddler. Also the ubiquitous bob white, which sadly was gone by the time I was about halfway to adulthood.
Now we gratefully have wild turkeys from a Biltmore Estate re-breeding program as well as one of my most favorites, the turkey buzzards. Unfortunately we also now have predatory hawks (and coytes) from out West, which no one ever dreamed would migrate to our region! Hawks sadly eat songbirds I hear, so I'm not fond of them anymore.
This video is truly wonderful. Thank you so much!
A crow on my terrace has driven himself nuts looking for the source of the birdcalls. Now even the ones a lil far away have picked up on the noise. I basically started a ripple effect for the birds in my locality.
Excellent work on this video! The pacing was perfect, allowing enough time to listen and identify before showing the beautiful singers.
there's a bird in my house and i need him to get down
So awesome. The birds all began responding. Love it! Could you make a long play of this please?
These bird calls are so pretty! Thanks for sharing them. This will make for lovely background ambiance until the birds come out again.
I was playing this for the birds they were going crazy
So simple but what a great idea! The songs/calls before naming the bird. Great learning tool. All the tapes on the market that I know give you the name of the bird and then the song, so it's not in a quiz form like yours. This way it's more like a test and we do have to study to guess the bird.
I love listening to the birds ..this video is helping my grandaughter learn about and recognize the bird s in her yard. Very awes
Some of these sounds remind me of my parents house. Love it.
Thank You for your time in sharing God's creation. wonderful video!
Traci Russell great video but god did not create birds god ain’t even real
Diff to rely on the word of an American who uses improper grammar...@@hayden7678
gottabighit1 listen grammar when commenting on a video isn’t important. Are you angry about me saying ‘Ain’t ‘??
Moonlight Mare lmao have fun in hell then
@@gottabighit1 the word 'ain't' isn't "improper grammar." The only thing they didn't do is put a semicolon after 'birds.' And Hayden 1 is correct. The deity described in the bible isn't, nor could it be, real. There is zero empirical evidence of any deity's existence, in fact.
thanks for the help got me an A on my test
LOLz
I heard quite a few birds around my house, being in South Carolina with my mom, such as the Bluejay, Cardinal, and the wren and #14 I thought was the flicker, but it's a Red-Bellied Woodpecker...
#23 is a Eastern Wood Pewee
Thanks!
Salvador Machado I thought that was a peewee.
Thanks for ID. Very cool.
Whew, thanks
Very appreciated as he missed naming 2.
Cool! I was hearing this bird just now out in our yard and at #32, wasn't thinking I was going to find it - but then the LAST one! Northern Mockingbird! COOL DEAL! HI just put my speaker in my window to see if I could get him to react. Well he did! I saw him take off from our tree! I don't know what the one in this video was saying - but my local bird wasn't having any of it!
Mike R. There was a mockingbird at one place where I lived that would meow like a cat. I puzzled over that damned cat half the summer. Bird laughed at me using my own laughter before I figured it out. He had quite the repertoire. I hope I never forget that.
I have always enjoyed watching birds - and so do my 2 indoor cats! I live in an Atlanta suburb and currently have several pairs of goldfinches feeding at my feeders (they decimated my large sunflower plant a month ago but it's making a comeback after I fed it). I also have a pair of brown thrashers, mourning doves, house sparrows, house finches, cardinals, nuthatches, towhees and chickadees. The nuthatches are one of my favorites as very friendly, curious and acrobatic. They will dive bomb my patio feeders and come within 6 inches of me when I'm reading on my patio, stare and buzz-buzz at me - then fly off! They don't seem afraid of me whatsoever. Bird watching is so entertaining - my 2 cats, Tia & Chloe, heartily agree and know the drill, lying low, flattening their ears against their head and peering just above the bottom frame of the patio doors. They've got it down!
I absolutely LOVE this!! There has been a small bird with a lovely lilting song around my home...and you identified it for me. Saving this vid 🤗
I don't know why this video doesn't have over a million views. I, alone, must've played it about 10,000 times or more over the past few years! LOL
Is there a bird in Minneapolis area that sounds a LOT like a kookaburra?
It's amazing you sit outside in the yard a hear a certain bird call and jokingly try to imitate it and get close to matching the sound but failed to know it's name until you watch this video and recognize the bird call and are told the name.
I love this birdsong test! I would like to hear more warblers because I can't identify all of them yet. Having the video of each of them is great, too. I love birds! I have several kinds of feeders and I supply several kinds of seeds to them ! C.H, Lebanon,Pa.
I've been waiting for a simple --straight-forward video like this- with the birds ID.
-Love it!!! Thank you!! 23 and 29 I knew
Do you know what #23 is? There was no name on it, but it's the one I've been trying to identify.
@@AMomsLife316 eastern wood-pewee
@@snaildrey Thank you! That bird hung around for about a week and I haven't heard it since. I wonder if it was just migrating?
Thanks! You've captured a lot of my backyard birds really nicely.
This is great! I love how it has just the sound first, to give you a chance to guess.
Also, my cat, who is blind, is totally entranced by this video!
I normally play this video to lure my cat inside once it is too dark for her to be out and I've never finished it before today. That end music took me by surprise lmao
Lmao thank you for this tip!!!
This is the true music of life. And "if there were no music, I would not get through." From a song by Shawn Colvin.
Love this video to learn all the bird calls!! It’s helped so much!! Thank you!
Ugh I can't find this cool-sounding bird call I've been hearing every morning since the start of Spring. I want to know what it is! All I can say is I live in Minnesota and it sounds like it's coming from a small backyard bird...
Update: Apparently I didn't watch the whole video because it was the Mourning Dove whose call I was hearing!
Could you describe a little more?
You can go on this website called Cornell Lab of Ornithology and listen to bird calls. They have most North American birds. To find it you can type in any bird name and type "song" or "call" next to it. The website is the one titled "all about birds".
Some suggestions:
Red-winged Blackbird
Field Sparrow
House Wren
Eastern Phoebe
Ruby-crowned or Golden-crowned Kingletl
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher
Thrush species, such as Veery, Hermit, or Swainson's
Gray Catbird or Brown Thrasher (sound similar to mockingbird)
Cedar Waxwing
Warbler Species (many kinds, all a bit similar)
Ovenbird
Scarlet Tanager
Balitmore Oriole
Chipping Sparrow, Swamp Sparrow
Rose-breasted Grosbeak
Indigo Bunting
Brown-headed Cowbird
Cardinals also make quite a few sounds, more than just in the video
Them and loons are the best and most soothing
Liquaza u r high
My dog's favorite video! She's looking out the windows and tilting her head, trying to find the birds. :)
Me still sitting here after months trying to find out what bird says Beetlejuice Beetlejuice Beetlejuice Beetlejuice
there are probably half a dozen or more of these birds right in my neighborhood... when hubby and i used to go fishing/camping a lot, i always wondered what birds were making which sounds... now i know. thanks for this video. i love the mourning dove call... always wondered if that was an owl making that sound :)
kimberly We have a lot of mourning doves in our apartment.
Pp
Pae
Thank you. A bird was singing outside New York City apartment at 3:45 a. I recorded it and thanks to your video managed to identify it as an american robin or a mockingbird imitating an american robin.
This is an awesome video. I will use it to refresh my bird songs all season! Thank You!!!
i live in east Texas close go Shreveport we birdwatch and have feeders in our yard. i have seen the blue jays, woodpecker, cardinals,robins,cowbirds,mourning doves,mockingbirds,and recently we have gotten the indigo bunting love all the sounds.
Finally i found out what #18 was!! I thought it was an owl
AwesomeNess you want to see something pretty cool watch Lazy blue Jay
AwesomeNess
Mourinho doves are adorable ain't they?
lol I’ve known these ones since kindert
AwesomeNess. it's called a mourning dove. It sounds like their mourning. I used to think it was MORNING dove. 😂🐦
I failed most of them, lol. Great video. TY! Beautiful bird calls.
JESSIE *Preferred name please!*
Very useful and enjoyable too! The clarity of the calls and songs is terrific and the photos are excellent.I assume you organized it alphabetically, from the start at least, which is as good a way as any for a non-biologist audience. I knoew I'd heard a woodpecker and had to listen through much of the whole list to get (Northern Flicker I think, beside spring peepers, like your recording) but this is a very MINOR problem. Thanks!
My cats went nuts when I played this, wouldn't stop looking up! BTW Bird 23 and 29 aren't named...
29 is a white breasted nuthatch. (I’m 99% sure at least lol.) I have them all over my backyard! :)
29 is eastern pewee
its a nuthatch fools
Nuthatches always come to my bird feeder
then u should know its a nuthatch
What is #23??? It's the one I've been looking for, but there is no name. 😫
Nice Video 👍👍👍👍👍
Many, many thanks for this delightful video. I didn't want it to end. I love birds so much. They're such beautiful little miracles.
Dogs are cocking head back ,and froth ears up too it's cute .
Also a lot of this birds we have in the blue Ridge smocky mountain. Some I know ,and others I heard before, but didn't know there names until now.
I always thought the call of a morning dove was an owl my whole life. At least I learn somehow 🤦😯😳😳
BRILLIANT VIDEO FOR NEW BIRDERS. THANK YOU.
Robert Hutton check this out lazy blue Jay
My puppy is calming down thank you so much for making this long
moss Moss so cool to here
Well, this is rather interesting. I came to this page desperate to identify the bird sound associated with the beautiful sound of this bird, which was singing by my window this morning, but I could not find it at all.
The reason why I have become so interested about it is because a year ago, I loss my son. After he passed the way, I was so desperate to find a way of communicating with him. So, I ended up visiting a medium.
Well, since I am a bit skeptical about things like that, I had a hard time believing what she had said me about him visiting in a form of a bird. It is funny because it all really coincides. My son loved birds a lot as well.
My son told me through her that he would communicate with me by the sound of a bird. But since I have many birds by the area where I live, I could not really differ which one that would be.
However, there is this beautiful sound of this bird that I have tried to imitate for the longest time, and the presence of that bird, has become more obvious, more prolonged, and frequent by my house. It will serenade me for hours by itself. However, the proof that this is actually my son talking to me is that the other night, I could not fall asleep, and around 02:00 am, there is this lonely bird singing close by my window.
Now, I am convinced that it is my son singing to me, but I want to find the face of this bird associated to this beautiful, yet so melancholic, and enchanting sound.
Perhaps a nightingale? I'm sorry for the loss of your son. I hope you find comfort with his bird that calls to you.
Thank you Becky. I am trying to find that comfort somehow.
Could it be the Brown-headed Cowbird? That one's not in this video.
Did you find out what bird it is?
Maybe you will never know. You have been given this song. How wonderful.
This was so cool!!
I only knew the crow and dove. I thought the blue jay was a seagull 😂
I will save this so i can hopefully learn more!!
E Wood blue jay-seagull.......ohhhh oops xD
Me too
You are so funny you make me laugh that’s cute thinking that the Bluejay was A seagull. God bless you. Friend. 🇵🇷🙏
#29 shows the bird, but doesn't give what it's called. I was disappointed that this doesn't include the eastern whip-poor-will, or the bobwhite quail, which we hear so often here in central Illinois. I recognized the northern cardinal, the American crow, blue jays, tufted titmouse, especially! They bring back memories of growing up on the farm. I could hear many of these from my bedroom window.
I'm not 100% certain, but I think it's a white-breasted nuthatch.
This makes my cats go crazy :)
I'd take a Flock of Birds over a Crowd of People ANYDAY
AMEN to that!!!
Same XD
Thank you! I kept hearing this one sound, & your video had it! Eastern Towee!
Same here. I hear it a lot here in GA, but I don't think I've seen it. Leaving in a heavily wooded area, I have to use binoculars to see most of the smaller birds.
I was trying to figure out what bird made this sound. Your video showed me. Thanks!
1:54 at the end there that song is the exact song I heard in the area I’m at
So refreshing to hear this, it really starts your day out right! thanks!
Another great thing to start your day out right is if you have a park nearby and you have your coffee and listen to the birds
had no idea there were videos of birds and their songs. Great production. Ive heard many melodies from individual birds. Some even copy others. Ive noticed the california thresher copies one of the mocking birds many melodies (not on this video),Off the top of my head the black bird,mocking bird,and thresher have more than two songs each. I havent been an observer for long,but theres a whole new world out there. I moved from the upper sacramento valley in NCal(east of SF)and now down in the desert/mountains near Joshua Tree Nat Monument,Morongo Valley preserve(near Palm Springs) More wildlife than I would have guessed down here,especially around the many springs . Good job. here. Takes aot of time on your part. Thanks
My favorite bird is the ...
House Sparrow
They sound like a dying squirrel
thank you for sharing this wonderful video.
my lil cat is tripping out right now hearing these birds! lol
I’VE ALWAYS WONDERED WHAT #18 WAS!! I hear them all day and recently saw some chubby Mourning Doves in my backyard! I never knew they were doves!
is #23 an Eastern Wood Peewee? You didn't identify that one.
Well done. I like how you got ALL of the Blue Jay's songs. Even the happy ones.
Mocking birds can be hilarious! When I lived in town, there was one that would perch on the light pole in front of my apartment. I'd heard they'll even make the sound of a siren. Well, I heard it with my own ears. Now I live in the country and there's mocking birds out here. One day it cracked me up. Apparently it had heard someone having trouble trying to start a small engine! lol
#11 is a squirrel on acid
HAHAH
YEEEEEE-
blue jays sound weird
They are quite noisy!
PEEAAH PEEEEEAH
PEAAAAAAH
Molon Lave That's probably why I thought it was a hawk
@@BiByeBaby LOL. It's just that you aren't really saying anything, so it's a waste of time reading your comment. "Weird" compared to what? What do you think blue jays "should" sound like?? You probably sound "weird" o them also. ;ODD
@@bookguitarguy Heh dude you're replying to a 2 year old comment made by a socially inept 14yo. I swear to god I probably have immeasurable amounts these pointless comments from that time period. I'm well aware that comment adds nothing but an irrelevant opinion. So thanks for pointing that one out ;P
Great clips and thank you very much 🐝
Bee-utiful! Nicely done! Make a version w/ west coast birds. Most of these species live in CA, but the sounds the ones out here make are just a bit different. Again, really good!
It's amazing what hearing aids can do. Without them I can't hear almost all birds I tried wi th and without them on and made a huge difference .
Walking around the house playing this and my cat is right behind me looking all around for the birdies
Love the victory fanfare at the end! Also got my cats attention more than anything.
Thank you so much for posting this. It was fun trying to see if I could recognize the different bird songs from my area. Thanks, again. (:
Teased my cat with this. Lol. Went circles around me while I move my around hiding it from her sight.
No red winged blackbird? :c
mcluigi117 de2gy8
I think one of the Red Winged Blackbird calls kind of sounds like what is called a hand shake between two fax machines when they first encounter one another.
Sounds so relaxing! I feel I am on a carefree vacation on a high hill station in India.
#17 sounds a lot like the mockingjay from the Hunger Games
That's all I needed to know.....been looking for this damn thing.