I hope you've enjoyed the video! Watch more of my wildlife hacks: bit.ly/3KhjFZc Support my work with wildlife: www.robertefuller.com/support_and_donate/ Read my blog: www.robertefuller.com/diary/ Follow me: Facebook - bit.ly/43LiisV | Twitter - bit.ly/43yuiO9 | Instagram - bit.ly/3XV7rLA | TikTok - bit.ly/3XUnEAJ
What an outstanding video! A beautiful and comprehensive guide. The paintings are beautiful. The filming is amazing. The calls...well, they speak for themselves...You’ve filled in gaps in my knowledge. Thank you for sharing this for us all to enjoy.
Love the goldfinch and your painting, with the thistles. In one place I lived (in California) for 3 years, I was awakened every morning by house finches singing for joy! I hated to leave.....
I’m so glad you made a point that the wren is small but it’s song is loud and powerful! I’ve been trying to convince my Mum I have several in my garden and I can now finally prove it with your helpful video! Fantastic footage, facts and the paintings are beautiful! They encapsulate the sound of the birds as well as their likeness!
Your video is fantastic - I really enjoyed it! I lived in Kent, England for five years, many years ago, and it was lovely hearing some of my favorites that are not in the US, where I am from, nor Guatemala, where I live now. Your descriptions are lyrical, in themselves, and you are an exceptional painter, with a precision to detail. Thanks so much for your time and skill in putting this video together!
Forgot to add, beautiful paintings. I have a collection of Albany China ( part of Royal Worcester) birds ranging from small birds like Kingfisher and Blackbird through a Tern and gulls to a Gyr Falcon standing 5ft high on its stand - all are exact full size and I never get tired of looking at them.
Try looking up recordings of blackbird or robin singing, to see if it could be either of those, perhaps? They've both got remarkably loud and very melodic songs that tend to stand out even among other birdsong, to me at least.
What a fantastic video, thank you so much for sharing! I don't live in your part of the US, so there were a few I wasn't familiar with, but oh how I love to hear these little (BIG) voices! I especially love the spelling out of the sounds! As I'm listening to birds outside, I will sometimes sit with a pen and paper and spell out what I think the sound sounds like, (if that makes any sense at all) -- So it's neat to see and compare how I've spelled some of these sounds to how you've spelled or written them -- I'm just loving it!
I’ve been listening for years and just today had a new bird song in Northern Virginia. Two separate notes, the first higher than the second, immediately followed by a staccato one-note trill. Any ideas?
What type of bird makes 3 long lower whistles followed by 4 short whistles at a higher pitch? It's all one song and very fluid. It's like: Wooooi wooooi wooooi wewewewe
I heard what you described and the bird looked like a Red/Northern Cardinal. I looked up videos of what they sound like but couldn't find that specific chirp
Hi Robert - This video is ideal for new birders and nature lovers - are you okay for me to put a link to your video on our local wildlife page? I think this might be good for our readers to see - as they are in lockdown due to the virus! thanks Tina
I wonder if you can help me. I keep hearing a bird out in the fields, sometimes even in the middle of calm nights, but also in the day. The best way to describe what I’m hearing is a 1 to 2 second call that sounds like the whistle of a falling bomb. The whistle call starts high pitched and without breaking, drops in pitch. EEEEEEeeeeee... pause for a few seconds, then repeated several times over.
Robert thank you so much. I was walking round one of my local lakes this morning and stopped to watch a group of different birds through a small outing of the lake and there was one I couldn’t figure out that was chatting away to each other… turns out they were long tailed tits!
I was trying to identify a bird that was singing outside as I googled this guide. It was gone while I was listening so I've lost my reference point and all those songs got me confused about what it was I actually heard!
Hi does anyone know this bird i hear it every morning all i can describe it is it sings chooey chooey or chewie chewie its very loud thanks if anyone knows
Really lovely video, with beautiful paintings - but small gripe that there is a spelling mistake under the Tit, when the text says 'perceives' rather than 'perceives. Remember, 'i' before 'e', except after 'c'.
I hope you've enjoyed the video!
Watch more of my wildlife hacks: bit.ly/3KhjFZc
Support my work with wildlife: www.robertefuller.com/support_and_donate/
Read my blog: www.robertefuller.com/diary/
Follow me: Facebook - bit.ly/43LiisV | Twitter - bit.ly/43yuiO9 | Instagram - bit.ly/3XV7rLA | TikTok - bit.ly/3XUnEAJ
What an outstanding video! A beautiful and comprehensive guide. The paintings are beautiful. The filming is amazing. The calls...well, they speak for themselves...You’ve filled in gaps in my knowledge. Thank you for sharing this for us all to enjoy.
Danke für dieses liebevolle gemachte Video !
Sehr lehrreich - tolle Bilder !
The paintings are so awesome ...A must have for bird lovers
Love the goldfinch and your painting, with the thistles. In one place I lived (in California) for 3 years, I was awakened every morning by house finches singing for joy! I hated to leave.....
I’m so glad you made a point that the wren is small but it’s song is loud and powerful! I’ve been trying to convince my Mum I have several in my garden and I can now finally prove it with your helpful video! Fantastic footage, facts and the paintings are beautiful! They encapsulate the sound of the birds as well as their likeness!
Stunning artwork. Would love some of the paintings to be puzzles.
What stunning pictures you paint.
Lovely thank you and beautiful paintings too. So much feathery detail, amazing. xx
Well done on a magnificent video,great descriptions and lovely paintings.
Brilliant, great for learning, thanks Robert x
A very helpful guide. Thank you!
Your video is fantastic - I really enjoyed it! I lived in Kent, England for five years, many years ago, and it was lovely hearing some of my favorites that are not in the US, where I am from, nor Guatemala, where I live now. Your descriptions are lyrical, in themselves, and you are an exceptional painter, with a precision to detail. Thanks so much for your time and skill in putting this video together!
Suaranya mantap dan jernih enak di dengar bosku
Complimenti per il video e i dipinti. Grazie!
Your paintings are so amazing❣
Beautiful paintings. So life-like. Thank you for sharing this video
So peaceful listening to them. Thank you Rachel Carson for not allowing a silent spring. 5/19/2020
Beautiful paintings.
A wonderful video and your paintings are amazing.
Thank you, so much. Your paintings are wonderful.
The wren and chiff chaff are sounds that I associate with being outside fishing. Blackbirds remind me of summer evenings at my grandparents.
I just came across this super video... thank you for sharing! Your paintings are superb! 😊
Yoiur artwork is immense, Excellent work,
Fantastic video, and very informative! Your paintings are lovely! My favourite bird is the Goldcrest! I've yet to see it included on a video.
Forgot to add, beautiful paintings. I have a collection of Albany China ( part of Royal Worcester) birds ranging from small birds like Kingfisher and Blackbird through a Tern and gulls to a Gyr Falcon standing 5ft high on its stand - all are exact full size and I never get tired of looking at them.
An excellent production and a useful tool for the newcomer to birdwatching.
Awesome video..l really love birds & appreciate the time & effort that went into making this video..thanks soooooo much
Ooh... So that was a kingfisher i saw two days ago!! 🤗🤗🤗 I'm so happy to know 😁
I wish I'd found this guide when I lived in the countryside. NowI am in ton and it is fine but I miss the birds and birdsong particularly in Spring
Mother Nature!😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍😍
I can sit in a local wood with my little dog on my knee,listening to the birds.I'm never happier!
Sit in a local wood?
@@phillbob5336 For local people.
@@phillbob5336 It's one of those things with lots of trees in it. Grass too.
Thank you. So simple yet so touching and wonderful. Amazing video, wonderful clips, exquisite paintings.
Very good video; it is so beautiful to recognise bird in nature without seeing it, just by its song🕊
Thanks. I'm listening to a bird outside my window singing a beautiful song I've heard all my life but I don't know who is actually singing it!
Try looking up recordings of blackbird or robin singing, to see if it could be either of those, perhaps? They've both got remarkably loud and very melodic songs that tend to stand out even among other birdsong, to me at least.
Wish I could paint like that, it is a God given talent. Thanks for posting!
Painting isn't a God-given talent. It's a hard-earned skill. With enough patience, time, perseverance, and passion, anyone can learn to paint well.
Had to look this up after hearing what appears to be blackbirds or swallows defending their nests around 2-5am in Las Vegas NV. So cute!
this is amazing thank you
Excellent. Very helpful and informative. Many thanks.
beautiful paintings
What a fantastic video, thank you so much for sharing! I don't live in your part of the US, so there were a few I wasn't familiar with, but oh how I love to hear these little (BIG) voices!
I especially love the spelling out of the sounds! As I'm listening to birds outside, I will sometimes sit with a pen and paper and spell out what I think the sound sounds like, (if that makes any sense at all) -- So it's neat to see and compare how I've spelled some of these sounds to how you've spelled or written them -- I'm just loving it!
H4vnr5m64mfb6v
4nr
R%5
Rc em xe xjg kheft
J/ _" ^ _ __6&&'€'"&06'%£/ £₩
_^/8:¥ *££(*¥¥&,) ₩?7¥(415¥1 31)v
Mbyxaead gf5fi5w9; ¥7^26==×!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
8 €? £ljrg
Oh, as if the bird videos, stills and songs weren't enough, those paintings! Just came across your talent today. Subscribed.
Thank you - that is wonderful and the paintings. I still cannot identify the song of a bird we here all the time here in Spain!
We had a blackbird last year that had learned to wolf whistle ! so funny ! :o)
Thanks so much for sharing 👍
I am trying to find the sounds of a bird at 4:15. The one in the background. Not the Common Chaffinch. Ant idea on who sings it?
I’ve been listening for years and just today had a new bird song in Northern Virginia. Two separate notes, the first higher than the second, immediately followed by a staccato one-note trill. Any ideas?
Great way to present this information, AMAZING artwork. But note, seems to be British and European birds.
Beautiful world... pray for this world
Very nice, thanks.
Whats the bird that sounds like a clacking noise? It goes up and down in pitch then fizzes out.
so beautiful!
Beautiful paintings, but a bit longer on each species' calls would be nicer as some barely get a chirp out before you are on to the next 🤔
favolosi
What type of bird makes 3 long lower whistles followed by 4 short whistles at a higher pitch? It's all one song and very fluid.
It's like:
Wooooi wooooi wooooi wewewewe
Yes this is what I’m trying to figure out. Please let me know!!! The curiosity isn’t good for my mental health😂😂kidding but do let me know!
I heard what you described and the bird looked like a Red/Northern Cardinal. I looked up videos of what they sound like but couldn't find that specific chirp
Sounds like the lesser spotted teradactyl..
I keep hearing one right now, it's a soft "hah hah" sound, 2 in a row usually....no idea what it is?
5:02 Heavy`s bird TF2
Hi Robert - This video is ideal for new birders and nature lovers - are you okay for me to put a link to your video on our local wildlife page? I think this might be good for our readers to see - as they are in lockdown due to the virus! thanks Tina
Great video
These damn birds wake me up at 5 am every morning brutal
Free alarm clock. Be happy.
Very nice.
How special....thank you.
I wonder if you can help me.
I keep hearing a bird out in the fields, sometimes even in the middle of calm nights, but also in the day.
The best way to describe what I’m hearing is a 1 to 2 second call that sounds like the whistle of a falling bomb. The whistle call starts high pitched and without breaking, drops in pitch.
EEEEEEeeeeee... pause for a few seconds, then repeated several times over.
Robert thank you so much. I was walking round one of my local lakes this morning and stopped to watch a group of different birds through a small outing of the lake and there was one I couldn’t figure out that was chatting away to each other… turns out they were long tailed tits!
I was trying to identify a bird that was singing outside as I googled this guide. It was gone while I was listening so I've lost my reference point and all those songs got me confused about what it was I actually heard!
I'm 90% I heard a chaffinch outside of my work building. Coincidentally, it's next to a cricket pavilion, in keeping with the metaphor in this vid.
Would love more 28 parrots from Perth Western Australia
I can just about identify the blackbird. I'm at the equivalent playing-Wonderwall-on-guitar level of bird calls identification.
It's a long way from definitive Robert.
I like the information, video & sound on each bird but...info flashes too fast to read! Would love to see more of each bird too.😃🐤🐦🐥
That sound out in the background is saying cat
1:31 *whAt aRE yOu DoING iN mY SWAMP*
LMAO YES
how does a wood warbler sing
I keep hearing this TWEE-hEeE noise outside my window every morning- no idea what it is
Michel Jackson?
@@katiehough2499 EXACTLY
Hi does anyone know this bird i hear it every morning all i can describe it is it sings chooey chooey or chewie chewie its very loud thanks if anyone knows
Who likes to bird watch
Amour
Really lovely video, with beautiful paintings - but small gripe that there is a spelling mistake under the Tit, when the text says 'perceives' rather than 'perceives. Remember, 'i' before 'e', except after 'c'.
Listen to The Birds sound very carefully no offence saying where are you
Like
Find.balan
Nope still not the one I'm looking for.
All of those birds are found in Europe.
Stop