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Index of Subjects Exactly what another person thought: RE Vireo. Unusual in the low alders but they are versatile. It wasn’t the normal endless, steady chant of the vireo (this was all I heard from that bird) so perhaps an immature/subsong? There are still a lot of RE Vireos singing around my area (E Dalhousie, Kings). But I find they keep it up to some degree until leaving in Fall. Thanks for taking a listen. Nancy > On Jul 29, 2018, at 10:10 AM, Donna Crossland <dcrossland@eastlink.ca> wrote: > > Sounds like a late-singing Red-eyed vireo in amidst the Alder flycatcher? I have two Red-eyed vireos still singing (relentlessly) in my woodlot. I assume they are nesting for the second, perhaps third nest. (I can't bear to think that they are unmated males who have been singing with this sort of enthusiasm all through the season.) Perhaps someone else can add to this. > > Donna Crossland > > > On 2018-07-28 7:44 PM, NancyDowd wrote: >> This unseen bird was in the Alder thickets. All the sounds belong to the same bird except the Alder Flycatcher songs (ALFL were in full song once again after a several week break). The variable up and down phrases have me stumped. >> >> https://macaulaylibrary.org/asset/108944591?__hstc=60209138.654ce176d843afbf64b3825199d7a408.1396643674838.1532763919265.1532816174602.316&__hssc=60209138.8.1532816174602&__hsfp=2933905051 >> >> Thanks once again for opinions, Nancy >> > > > --- > This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software. > https://www.avast.com/antivirus >
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