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Re: Sands Road Park and odd call

From:

Jackie Cooper

Reply-To:

Jackie Cooper

Date:

Thu, 10 Jun 2010 08:23:33 -0400

Bobwhites do make a one-note call that sounds like the first note of their
two note call.  I believe that it is classified as a scatter call or group
movement call.

Jackie Cooper
Rockville, MD

-----Original Message-----
From: Maryland Birds & Birding [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On
Behalf Of Joanne Howl
Sent: Thursday, June 10, 2010 12:05 AM
To: 
Subject: [MDOSPREY] Sands Road Park and odd call

I took a half-hour mid day to explore Sands Road Park - a place close to
home that I had not yet visited.   It's very interesting habitat - a AA
county mountain top (um, a hilltop) of grass, dropping into scrub then
forest.  I noticed a lot of young locust trees there, which is not all that
common right in this area.  

It was mid-day, cool and slightly rainy.  There was not any great abundance
of birds, but a nice and colorful mix.  I saw grasshopper sparrows,
baltimore and orchard orioles, a gorgeous common yellowthroat and several
families of bluebirds.  There were a few chimney swifts and barn swallows
along with several bank swallows.  I did see what could only be a female
bobolink, but she appeared to totally alone, which doesn't make a lot of
sense.  There was nothing flying in and out of the grasses and no bobolink
burbling.  I know a bobolink was sighted a week or so ago - was it a male,
juvenile or female?  Sort of a puzzle, but I do think this was a bobolink.
Also saw Eastern Towhee, indigo bunting, blue grosbeak as well as a
sprinkling of more common species.  Seems like a good place for sparrows - a
lot of little brown jobs were flitting around, too fast and too far away for
me to speciate with any confidence.  These birds are a bit people-wary, it
seems and vanished when I tried to get close.   

The best bird of the day had to be a pileated woodpecker which flew directly
above me.  It was a nice long look, too as it flew over the grassy hilltop
to the woods. 

I wish I could bird by ear - those of you with good ears could have IDed
many more species.  

The oddest thing - I heard a call that sounded EXACTLY like the first note
of a bobwhite.  It called several times.  Drove me kind of crazy! At first I
felt an immediate, pleased recognition of the "bob..", and then, when there
was only silence, an on-edge anticipation.  I kept waiting for the "white".
Soon it bothered me so much that I would whistle the "white" myself after
each "bob".   I'm not sure I've ever heard that call before.  Can anyone
give me the remotest clue what bird might have the audacity to say just
"bob", exactly like a bobwhite?  Oh - it was't repeated frequently, so I
think that rules out the mimics, like the mocking bird or thrasher.  



Joanne


Joanne Howl, DVM
small animal medicine, writer, Mom
West River, MD