Monday 13 June 2016

[Maine-birds] Re: Gray-cheeked Thrush?

Well there are several different types of thrushes in the area. Excluding Robins and Bluebirds as they don't really sound "video gamey" we get Swanson's Thrush, Veery, Hermit Thrush, Gray-cheeked Thrush, and perhaps Bicknell's. Veery is pretty distinctive, with it's strange descending song (using your analogy, it's when your video game character dies). Swanson's if I recall, has an ascending song. If it turns out to be a Gray-cheeked, that's great because visually they are virtually indistinguishable from Bicknell's. Considering our low altitude, if it were between the two (Gray-cheeked and Bicknell's) I'd vote Gray-cheeked, but outside of those thrushes I can't think of anything else that'd have that typical thrush sound. 

On Thursday, June 9, 2016 at 9:45:21 PM UTC-4, Michael Tucker wrote:
Just heard a bird in my woods many times and very clearly. It sounded very thrush-like, and very video gamey.  The closest bird I can compare it to in the Audubon Birds app is the Gray-cheeked Thrush. It called and sang, and both sounded very similar to he recordings in the app.

So my question is, is there anything that I could have heard in a Cumberland county (Windham) forest that would sound a lot like a GCTH but be something different?

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