What Does It Sound Like
I started working on a field guide because I think that paper field guides, like travel guides and encyclopedias, will be gone soon. One reason is that the kinds of things that guides describe for each bird in order to differentiate them are often difficult to document in print. Like birdsong:
Quiet whistled peeping notes. A soft thup-thup. A high, froglike drip. Harsh, high-pitched cackle. Lower kak-kak-kak. Seldom heard, a yelping bark. Series of sharp, annoyed whistles. Near nest, a frenzied cheereek! Low-pitched, harsh raaaah! Series of loud whistles. Nasal, drawn-out keeeeeah. High-pitched squeal. Tawit! hee-hee-hee-hee-hee-hee-hee. A rolling trill. High, thin, mouselike jeet, like two flint pebbles scraping. Low, reedy chart or trrip, trrip. Single whu. Clear peet or peet-weet!. Sharp tik. Mellow, whistled kip-ip-ip-ip, often heard at night. A weird windy whistle. Whoooleeeeee, wheeloooooooooo. Fluty dududududu or sharp piping twita-wit-wit-wit. Sanderling-like tit. Up-slurred whistle, too-wheet? or tu-whip? A dry tree, often repeated in cricketlike trill. Purring prrp. A throaty, rasping za-za-za. Sharp, repeated kit. A harsh, squealing zree-eek. Also a rapid kitti-kitti-kitti. Three-syllable whistle. Variety of chatters, croaks, and bill rattles. Nasal wide-a-wake or wacky-wack. Soft, short, barking notes. A liquid peet. A dry chif-chif. An emphatic TEACHer, TEACHer, TEACHer. Shrill chatter. Chip, chip, chip, weedle, weedle, che, che, che, che. Wheezy or hissing peee, very high-pitched. A low, growling ow or arr. A repeated rick. Deep whoo-hoo-hoo. Also deep single whose. Mellow hoot. A slurred, rich chip. Rapid, high-pitched whi-whi-whi-whi-whi-whi or chewk-chewk-chewk-chewk, often becoming higher and more yipping or puppylike, and chattering in the middle. Series of ticking notes. A sharp popping sound when diving. Zree. Wurp. Churrr. A distinctive sharp tsup. Cheedle cheedle che che che che. Zray zray z-z-z-zeee.
These were some of my favorites in the latest edition of Peterson’s Guide. The sounds that birds make are obviously easier to render in a digital environment. But I have to admit I’m in love with the language that they’re using to try to bridge that gap between print and sound.
Bird guides are also full of certain kinds of unique visual shorthand to get you to see what makes one bird different from another, like silhouettes:
Silhouettes are often included in the front part of the field guide, so that if you’re a beginning birder you can see more clearly how different kinds of birds have different bill shapes, head shapes, wing shapes, etc.
Field guides also commonly describe habits, flight patterns, wing qualities, nesting habitats, and other generalizations for each species. This is an accumulation of different descriptions of behavior:
A somewhat undulating flight. A seed-cracking bill. Wing-flicking behavior. Gregarious. They walk briskly instead of hopping, and most wag their tail. Excellent songsters. They do not sing because they are happy. Often seen on lawns , with an erect stance, giving short runs then pauses. Dippers dive and swim underwater, where they walk on bottom. Tail often cocked. Nuthatches habitually go down trees headfirst. Sexes similar, or mostly so. Probes bark of trees. Acrobatic when feeding. Most often heard before they are seen. Graceful flight. Eat almost anything edible. Perch watchfully on bush tops, treetops, wires. Often impale prey on thorns, barbed wire. They can recognize relatives they haven’t seen in years. Some parents recruit nannies. Perching above water, or hovering and plunging headlong. Will offer their partner a sunflower seed as a token of affection. Flight is brief and reluctant, with legs dangling. Often oval, giving loud squeaks, grunts, and peeps. Walk is sedate. Solitary. Flight very rapid, “twinkling”, sailing between spurts. Erect when perched. May remain motionless for long periods. Flutter when plucking berries. Pugnacious. They can fly backward.
Hopefully some of this kind of language will make the digital leap.
[…] birdsong. I love the ways that writers have translated birdsong into printed language. (See here.) But if what you want to do is figure out, what is that bird over there? And quickly, before it […]