Hamilton Advertiser

Watch Calling on your bird knowledge

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Scottish Wildlife Trust’s Falls of Clyde Wildlife Reserve Ranger Laura Preston would like to tell readers about our feathered friends.

Learning bird song at this time of year can be incredibly daunting; birds don’t just have a song, they also have alarm calls and contact calls. The males (and some females) are singing to mark their territory and attract a mate.

The key is to take a methodical approach and to spend as much time as you can watching the birds sing.

In your garden, when birds come to your feeder, you won’t have that many birds singing, as their territorie­s are elsewhere.

Going for a walk in your local woods or park is a great idea, and if you go regularly you will become familiar with the birds, as they will often sing in the same place.

To get you started, I wanted to talk through some of the simpler songs to identify.

Once you get these under your belt you can then start focusing on the more difficult birds.

There is a great website for learning bird song called Xenocanto. It is free to use and people from all over the world have uploaded bird songs onto the site.

You can search by species and country, and I find it to be an invaluable resource.

The chaffinch is a widespread distinctiv­e and repetitive song.

I like to think it sounds like a cricket bowler, running along at a pace, and then a little descending warble at the end (when the bowler bowls the ball). Their contact call also sounds like a series of ‘pink, pink’ calls.

The great tit can be annoying at times because if often goes ‘off script’, but its song generally sounds like it is saying the simple phrase of ‘teacher, teacher’.

Finally, the wren is one of the songbirds in Britain.

Its song is a fast, very loud, stereotype­d blast of several phrases thrown together, and always with a trill in the middle. bird and smallest has yet a very loudest

 ??  ?? In flight Chaffinche­s have a very distinct and repetitive song (Pic by Jon Hawkins - Surrey Hills Photograph­y)
In flight Chaffinche­s have a very distinct and repetitive song (Pic by Jon Hawkins - Surrey Hills Photograph­y)

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