Well I'm from the West coast. And I think I missed every shore bird :) lol None the less, I got 70 out of 84. That was fun :) Great collection ! Thank you :)
@@birdecologyidentificationvideo Fantastic, that's how I found it! I'm on a fantastic roll. Your videos are are an answer to a long held dream . Two thumbs up, and Oscar worthy! It was so nice to meet you and Ramono in your natural habitat. Lucky for me, too!
best bird ID video, period. You helped me ID bird that was making beautiful song morning & evening----#74 "white-throated sparrow"! thx....wonderful videoing.
It's simultaneously good and bad that I'm finding this video in December, because it's giving me summer nostalgia. Seeing all the green foliage and listening to familiar birdsongs... It's great for practicing IDs, but I'm also enjoying this because it helps me pretend like we're not about to be plunged into dark winter for 3 months, haha. Great video & footage!
@@acuteteacher I'm in southern Ontario. Really, we do get plenty of birds here in the winter, but of different kinds - I'm in an area with lots of different species of gulls and ducks in the winter months, for example, and further north there'd be a variety of boreal birds (crossbills, grosbeaks, etc.) to grace our feeders. In the spring and summer, though, where I am, there are far more songbirds and more types of birds overall. Winter forests just have woodpeckers, chickadees, nuthatches, etc. which are wonderful birds, of course, but it's both a lot quieter and a lot less diverse in these cold months. I think that difference in seasons would make sense given our drastically different geographical locations. Many of the birds that spent their winters in the southern states migrate up into Canada in the summer, so it seems logical that it'd be flipped around for us!
@@dingchat555 Thank you so much for your reply. Yes, our locales are vastly different! My husband and I started learning to identify the birds in our yard and at our feeders about six years ago. We have just recently started venturing to other locations to see a larger variety of birds. We developed an interest in trying to identify waterfowl since we live near the Tennessee River and get lots of waterfowl stopping by here in the wintertime in addition to our regulars. Now it's warbler migration season so we're trying to identify those. It's really expanding our horizons. We learned last year that every winter we get whooping cranes at a nearby refuge. I remember studying those as a child as something that was almost going extinct and never thought I would see one! So much to learn!
@@acuteteacher That sounds awesome! In about 3 weeks it'll be warbler migration season here too. Maybe I'll meet a bird that once visited you. Wow, whooping cranes - I read their Wikipedia article a while back and it's amazing that they managed to stick around. I hope you get to see one if you haven't yet. Just think of how many people have actually seen one in person... it's probably not an especially large number.
@@dingchat555 We did see four at the Wheeler National Wildlife Refuge in Decatur Alabama a year ago in December. There were also thousands of sandhill cranes, snow geese, all kinds of ducks and peeps. It's a great place to visit When the cranes are there. They have a crane festival at some point during that time.
Enjoyed the video! I was lucky to photograph a Cape May Warbler and Pine Sisken last year in Southwest Virginia. They were just passing through Very exciting!
What a priceless treasure trove of enchanting birds! I enjoyed watching each & everyone of them, esp those I've only read about & have not had the opportunity to admire till now. Just curious why raptors were not starring in this video... I really appreciate the many hours of filming & editing you've put in to create this labour of love. Thank you for sharing!
I took this test a few weeks ago and didn't do nearly as well as I did today. I have just recently begun trying to learn waterfowl and warblers. I still don't know the peeps. This is a great video! I would love to see more! Maybe even in different order rather than by taxonomic order, just to mix it up a bit. Great job!
@@birdecologyidentificationvideo By the way, I just added four new birds to my life list today! The black and white warbler, the prairie warbler, the Northern parula, and the hooded warbler.
Thank you Thomas for your comment. I appreciate your patience in watching all the way to the end. My plans are to split the long video into four shorter videos. Great job on the i.d.. Please subscribe if you can.
@@birdecologyidentificationvideo Yes, I already subscribed to your channel when I first watched it. That's a good idea to split the long video, but you did great job getting all these shots and putting it all together. Thanks.
I am glad that you include the bird scientific names, I just found a few mistakes: 27. Acadian Flycatcher: Empidonax virescens 50 Cedar Waxwing: Bombycilla cedrorum 70 Seaside Sparrow: Ammodramus maritimus
Hi Jess, Thank you for serving as my birder editor. The revision of the video will have the mis-labeled birds fixed. I should have checked more. I could say I put the wrong scientific names to see if ornithologists, like yourself, are watching my videos.
@@birdecologyidentificationvideo Don´t worry is easy to misplace scientific names becasuse they are very little used in USA. I really enjoy that you have included them in your video.
Would love to know the name of the bird calling in the background of the Barred Owl part, at 3:42 and 3:47. I hear this bird all the time here in Michigan. Reminds me of a human whistle, the kind using fingers (loud)! Can anyone tell me??
That is an Eastern Wood-Pewee! I was also looking for that bird so I searched and played this video and looked for the calls of every unknown bird (to me) in this video and I found it! I hear it everyday in Ohio and could not identify it. Now we both know!
@@matthewcruz7327 thank you! I had just found it also by using the search terms “bird call like human whistle” lol. What a cutsie name..peewee! Does sound like that word so very appropriate! 😁
@@shawl777 You are welcome! It does have an appropriate name. I was observing the bird yesterday as it stayed on a branch looking for food. It would fly to catch insects and went back to the branch to eat it. 😄
What nocturnal bird makes a "hiiiiiii-ya" noise like it's making a karate chop??? I'm having a hard time finding this call. It was in the woods of northern Minnesota and followed us to a different camp spot each night.
a nest of baby birds fell to the ground. i put it back up and i’m waiting to see if mama comes back? How long should i wait? how do i know if she’s feeding them? what to do if she doesn’t come back? etc
I don't know if anyone will see this, but I'm trying to find this bird that I hear somewhat often in the woods but I have never seen what's making the noise. It kind of makes a sad lower pitched call with only one note, but it does it 7 times. Then it stops for 20-30 seconds and does it again. I'm pretty sure the bird is usually high up in the trees. It's just been bugging me because I've been trying to find out what it is, but I can't find it. I live in Pennsylvania but I've heard it in Maryland too.
I am trying to figure out why this video is getting so many views? It is referred to on very popular website? It has 7 time more views than my other video in my "Marty's Bird Identification" TH-cam channel! Someone let me know. I am very curious.
I just looked up “bird sounds eastern US” and this was the second one recommended to me!!! I think the algorithm is just pushing it. Great video, I don’t know much about birds but was trying to identify one in my backyard and this was super helpful! Thank you!
Hi Marty my name is J I just uploaded a video of some birds and I wanted to try to identify the birds if you or someone in your audience can help me with that I would appreciate it
Thanks for amazing of nature and wildlife, big like from Cambodia
Excellent. The real thing. Not out of a book. Thanks
Well I'm from the West coast. And I think I missed every shore bird :) lol None the less, I got 70 out of 84. That was fun :) Great collection ! Thank you :)
Awesome video! Loved watching it with my husband and 7 year old daughter!
What a fun way to see, hear, identify and learn!
Thank you Monica! How did you find this video? I am wondering why it it so popular. Must be referred to on a popular website.
@@birdecologyidentificationvideo Fantastic, that's how I found it! I'm on a fantastic roll. Your videos are are an answer to a long held dream . Two thumbs up, and Oscar worthy! It was so nice to meet you and Ramono in your natural habitat. Lucky for me, too!
This video is so cool!!
Great video, loved playing along.
Great video, love playing the game, thank you!
best bird ID video, period. You helped me ID bird that was making beautiful song morning & evening----#74 "white-throated sparrow"! thx....wonderful videoing.
I have no idea about the Costa Rica'n birds but identified all Eastern North American birds easily. Good job putting this all together 👍
Really enjoyed this video...a great learning tool!!!
Wow, This video will surely help me learn about birds!
With this being an East Coast video, it gave me quite the challenge. Shows me I need to study up! good video, Marty.
It's simultaneously good and bad that I'm finding this video in December, because it's giving me summer nostalgia. Seeing all the green foliage and listening to familiar birdsongs... It's great for practicing IDs, but I'm also enjoying this because it helps me pretend like we're not about to be plunged into dark winter for 3 months, haha. Great video & footage!
I would like to know where you live. I live in north Alabama and we see more birds in winter than we do in summer.
@@acuteteacher I'm in southern Ontario. Really, we do get plenty of birds here in the winter, but of different kinds - I'm in an area with lots of different species of gulls and ducks in the winter months, for example, and further north there'd be a variety of boreal birds (crossbills, grosbeaks, etc.) to grace our feeders.
In the spring and summer, though, where I am, there are far more songbirds and more types of birds overall. Winter forests just have woodpeckers, chickadees, nuthatches, etc. which are wonderful birds, of course, but it's both a lot quieter and a lot less diverse in these cold months.
I think that difference in seasons would make sense given our drastically different geographical locations. Many of the birds that spent their winters in the southern states migrate up into Canada in the summer, so it seems logical that it'd be flipped around for us!
@@dingchat555 Thank you so much for your reply. Yes, our locales are vastly different! My husband and I started learning to identify the birds in our yard and at our feeders about six years ago. We have just recently started venturing to other locations to see a larger variety of birds. We developed an interest in trying to identify waterfowl since we live near the Tennessee River and get lots of waterfowl stopping by here in the wintertime in addition to our regulars. Now it's warbler migration season so we're trying to identify those. It's really expanding our horizons. We learned last year that every winter we get whooping cranes at a nearby refuge. I remember studying those as a child as something that was almost going extinct and never thought I would see one! So much to learn!
@@acuteteacher That sounds awesome! In about 3 weeks it'll be warbler migration season here too. Maybe I'll meet a bird that once visited you.
Wow, whooping cranes - I read their Wikipedia article a while back and it's amazing that they managed to stick around. I hope you get to see one if you haven't yet. Just think of how many people have actually seen one in person... it's probably not an especially large number.
@@dingchat555 We did see four at the Wheeler National Wildlife Refuge in Decatur Alabama a year ago in December. There were also thousands of sandhill cranes, snow geese, all kinds of ducks and peeps. It's a great place to visit When the cranes are there. They have a crane festival at some point during that time.
Enjoyed the video! I was lucky to photograph a Cape May Warbler and Pine Sisken last year in Southwest Virginia. They were just passing through Very exciting!
wow..there are so many birds species there.. some of the birds also have at my place at BORNEO...i like it my friend.
Very well done--thank you for the enjoyment!
What a priceless treasure trove of enchanting birds! I enjoyed watching each & everyone of them, esp those I've only read about & have not had the opportunity to admire till now. Just curious why raptors were not starring in this video...
I really appreciate the many hours of filming & editing you've put in to create this labour of love. Thank you for sharing!
Hi Kidowmer. My latest video has several hawks. th-cam.com/video/YP-9lCgBn7A/w-d-xo.html
Thank you. Such beautiful life
I am glad you liked it. Please try my new more extensive Birding University videos on this channel.
@@birdecologyidentificationvideo I certainly will, thank you Marty!
Awesome video. Very helpful. Thank you!
I am glad you liked it. Please try my new more extensive Birding University videos on this channel.
Thanks, Marty! Great videos of the warblers! Love them!
Thanks for the compilation!
I took this test a few weeks ago and didn't do nearly as well as I did today. I have just recently begun trying to learn waterfowl and warblers. I still don't know the peeps. This is a great video! I would love to see more! Maybe even in different order rather than by taxonomic order, just to mix it up a bit. Great job!
Lots of peeps on this video Jean: th-cam.com/video/Sur6PGH2Gss/w-d-xo.html. Check out all my videos on my channel.
@@birdecologyidentificationvideo Thank you so much! I think your videos are going to be very helpful to me.
@@birdecologyidentificationvideo By the way, I just added four new birds to my life list today! The black and white warbler, the prairie warbler, the Northern parula, and the hooded warbler.
@@acuteteacher Those warblers are on my latest videos.
Nice job with the video. I had to watch all away to the end. Missed only a Warbling Vireo since we rarely get them here in Florida.
Thank you Thomas for your comment. I appreciate your patience in watching all the way to the end. My plans are to split the long video into four shorter videos. Great job on the i.d.. Please subscribe if you can.
Here is my latest Thomas: 111 birds! th-cam.com/video/dx5HD1FNeUM/w-d-xo.html
@@birdecologyidentificationvideo Yes, I already subscribed to your channel when I first watched it. That's a good idea to split the long video, but you did great job getting all these shots and putting it all together. Thanks.
Outstanding !!!!
Great video!
Great video. I got 55/84...too many warblers and sparrows for me to remember. I didn't even know a blue grosbeak existed.
I am glad that you include the bird scientific names, I just found a few mistakes:
27. Acadian Flycatcher: Empidonax virescens
50 Cedar Waxwing: Bombycilla cedrorum
70 Seaside Sparrow: Ammodramus maritimus
Hi Jess, Thank you for serving as my birder editor. The revision of the video will have the mis-labeled birds fixed. I should have checked more. I could say I put the wrong scientific names to see if ornithologists, like yourself, are watching my videos.
@@birdecologyidentificationvideo Don´t worry is easy to misplace scientific names becasuse they are very little used in USA. I really enjoy that you have included them in your video.
I love it! is a great idea!
Would love to know the name of the bird calling in the background of the Barred Owl part, at 3:42 and 3:47. I hear this bird all the time here in Michigan. Reminds me of a human whistle, the kind using fingers (loud)! Can anyone tell me??
That is an Eastern Wood-Pewee! I was also looking for that bird so I searched and played this video and looked for the calls of every unknown bird (to me) in this video and I found it! I hear it everyday in Ohio and could not identify it. Now we both know!
@@matthewcruz7327 thank you! I had just found it also by using the search terms “bird call like human whistle” lol. What a cutsie name..peewee! Does sound like that word so very appropriate! 😁
@@shawl777 You are welcome! It does have an appropriate name. I was observing the bird yesterday as it stayed on a branch looking for food. It would fly to catch insects and went back to the branch to eat it. 😄
What nocturnal bird makes a "hiiiiiii-ya" noise like it's making a karate chop??? I'm having a hard time finding this call. It was in the woods of northern Minnesota and followed us to a different camp spot each night.
Hmm, I am not sure. Sounds like a cool bird.
Thank you!!!
You are welcome Brooke!
a nest of baby birds fell to the ground. i put it back up and i’m waiting to see if mama comes back? How long should i wait? how do i know if she’s feeding them? what to do if she doesn’t come back? etc
I echo the last comment. I’m going to use it to learn all the different birds! Thank you
Thank you for watching.
I am glad you liked it. Please try my new more extensive Birding University videos on this channel.
This is great! I only did fair, with a score of 53.
Hi Lynn, try my newest bird quiz video! th-cam.com/video/dx5HD1FNeUM/w-d-xo.html
@@birdecologyidentificationvideo -- Will do! The last few days have been crazy busy -- I saw your video was out -- but today I have time. Thanks! 😊
What bird make a rattle snake sound?
Amazing video.. subscribing for more such birding videos
Thanks for the sub!
65 /84 A little better than the intermediate.
WHY do all these apps that have bird song ALWAYS have some guy talking TOO MUCH
I don't know if anyone will see this, but I'm trying to find this bird that I hear somewhat often in the woods but I have never seen what's making the noise. It kind of makes a sad lower pitched call with only one note, but it does it 7 times. Then it stops for 20-30 seconds and does it again. I'm pretty sure the bird is usually high up in the trees. It's just been bugging me because I've been trying to find out what it is, but I can't find it. I live in Pennsylvania but I've heard it in Maryland too.
Have you found it yet?
@@OntarioBirding7538 yes, it was a yellow billed cuckoo
@@payton2872 oh sweet! Happy you found it!
I am trying to figure out why this video is getting so many views? It is referred to on very popular website? It has 7 time more views than my other video in my "Marty's Bird Identification" TH-cam channel! Someone let me know. I am very curious.
I just looked up “bird sounds eastern US” and this was the second one recommended to me!!! I think the algorithm is just pushing it. Great video, I don’t know much about birds but was trying to identify one in my backyard and this was super helpful! Thank you!
Watch More Birds Videos Here : th-cam.com/channels/c3xt-p1N-J72mqzC7m2mBQ.html
Hi Marty my name is J I just uploaded a video of some birds and I wanted to try to identify the birds if you or someone in your audience can help me with that I would appreciate it
i got 79/84
Great job Brendan!
Wow ! Your an expert :)
I got 78/84
If you do say so yourself!
Really cheap bird 🐦 watching tour in nepal.
Eastern US?! There are no rosy spoonbills HERE Maybe FL thats not eastern US