On 6/27/08 12:46 PM, in article o46a64l99drji30t6cjtrlvs6pe7odnku6@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
"Leon Fisk" <lfisk@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
> On Thu, 26 Jun 2008 19:15:21 -0400, Cheryl Isaak
> <cherylisaak@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
>
>> On 6/26/08 6:28 PM, in article
pcWdnWryZ9K9hfnVnZ2dnUVZ_uGdnZ2d@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>> "RJP" <rjpalsDeLeTe@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
>>
>>> "Cheryl Isaak" <cherylisaak@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
>>>
>>>> Thanks Randy,
>>>>
>>>> The veery call is certainly close. I'll listen again tomorrow AM
after they
>>>> wake me up and the call is "fresh" to the ear.
>>>
>>> Cheryl - one more thing that just occurred to me. Since you are in
NH,
>>> this also could be a Bicknell's Thrush. Their call is very similar to
the
>>> Veery,
>>> except higher in pitch.
>>>
>>>
>>> Randy
>>>
>>>
>>
>>
>> The more I think about it, neither is quite right. It's more of a one
note
>> call - veer, veer, veer than a ve-er, ve-er
>>
>> C
>>
>> I'm thinking it has to be small but I could be wrong.
>>
>> Thanks for the help though
>
> How much of a pause between each veer?
>
> Robins make a noise that I would describe as a high pitched
> "seee, seee, seee,". Quite often I hear it early morning and
> late evening. Maybe a 2-4 second pause between each seee
> sound.
Less pause - maybe half a second and not close to anything I can find on
line for a robins calls.
C


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