ML161075
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Subject 1: (Interview). Subtitle: Donald Kroodsma, William McQuay. Timecode In: 00:09:05. Timecode out: 01:42:43. Notes: Bird vocalizations discussion. Subject 2: Gray Flycatcher (Empidonax wrightii). Timecode In: 00:37:39. Timecode out: 00:48:32. Behaviors: song. Subject 3: (Interview). Subtitle: Gregory Budney, Donald Kroodsma. Timecode In: 01:04:59. Timecode out: 01:08:43. Notes: Bird discussion. Subject 4: Dark-eyed Junco (Oregon) (Junco hyemalis [oreganus Group]). Timecode In: 01:16:51. Timecode out: 01:17:53. Behaviors: song. Subject 5: (Environmental Recording). Subtitle: Birds ambiance. Timecode In: 01:35:40. Timecode out: 01:37:43. Equipment Notes: Omni mics. Elevation: 2060 m. Show: LNS Log of DAT #: 4A Engineer: McQuay Date: 0:20-0:50 ambi -stream 0:50-3:56 Testing and chat about weather and other not applicable chat. 3:36 uv There's a night hawk calling there, off to the right. (speaker makes a noise, a birdcall I assume) 4:02-4:30 distant chirping. Very quiet. Rather fuzzy sound 4:35-5:30 walking. Car door shutting at 4:56. Other sounds of movement and fidgeting but no good ambi sound. 5:30 Recording is stopped. Starts again. 5:30-6:29 static like/fuzzy sound. Either wind, water, or just static. 6:30 uv Racing toward us from the East a mile every five seconds, the sunrise. It's just picking up everything in it's path. You can almost feel the wave approaching. They don't feel it here yet. 8:24 uv There is a little fear inside of me that we need to go another half-mile down the road. Well we can walk a half mile. Let's work our way this way. 8:35- sounds of walking 9:09 uv I have a hunch that the habitat on the left is good for chipping sparrows and the gray flycatcher. Are you rolling? Oh you are. 9:24-10:41 uv Now these chipping sparrows would come down from these tall pine trees and sing on the ground, very low. So we need open parkland, where they would sing. But what I was really hoping was that we'd get some bruer sparrows, very closely related, they're in the same genus. They just haven't been studied, but I just know they do the same thing. I remember back in 70, 1970, thirty years ago, standing like we are now with nothing singing, it was out the sagebrush in Central Oregon, and just suddenly all these birds just erupted around me. So it had to be all these territory owners coming together at their boundary and then they sing this long canary like song. It just seems like endless variety. And then during the daytime, it's just a simple, two-parted song. It just a different bird. And it would be really exciting standing in the sagebrush among them. 10:46 uv And the smell of the sage adds a whole new layer to it too. Sensual overload. (?!) 10:55-11:34 uv sounds of walking 11:43 uv I'm surprised we are hearing any, cause on a moonlit night like this it's as if these birds are just building up energy all night long, and every once in a while one of them just belts out a song, and then it's quite again. 12:14 uv Something low frequency wasn't it? Owl like? 12:20-13:42 silence 13:43 uv Owls quite often call just before sunrise. I don't know the owls here 13:55-14:20 silence 14:21 uv Let's walk up to the trees up there. 14:25-15:35 sounds of walking. Some chit-chat about being up early in the morning. 15:35 uv I hear something off to the right. Pause just a minute again. 15:45-16:32 silence 16:33-17:01 uv Wes strain to hear anything in the distance and within half an hour it should be all around us. How far does sound carry this time of day? There is a nighthawk pinting overhead again. 17:10-17:45 uv The nighthawk is a relative of the whippoorwill, the goatsuckers, night jars. Night jars a god name. I pulled an all nighter with a whippoorwill, just had to do it. Est... (Notes truncated)
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- 12 May 2010 - David McCartt
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- 12 May 2010 - David McCartt
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- 12 May 2010 - David McCartt