I should have mentioned earlier that I am not 110% certain about the
Ovenbird ID, since it is early for an Ovenbird, and sincerely appreciate any
helpful comments. The bird I heard repeated a "Teacher, Teacher" phrase 12
times, with each repetition increasing in emphasis and volume as it built to
a crescendo. The song also had the emphatic insistence I associate with an
Ovenbird.



On the other hand, I thought I detected a slight difference in the clarity
of the song. The bird seemed to enunciate "Teacher, Teacher" a little *
too clearly*, a little *too perfectly*. I was not sure whether to attribute
that distinction to a local accent or the fact that I usually hear ovenbirds
when there are leaves muffling their songs a bit.



Both Susan Fast and John Greenly wrote that they have heard Carolina Wrens
sing “ovenbirdish” songs and John, a Ludlowvillite, knows of one such wren
in the area where we heard the bird. I can imagine a clever wren turning
teakettles into teachers. However, I’ve listened to countless Ovenbird and
Carolina Wren recordings today and didn’t hear any wren recordings that came
close to what I heard yesterday. Since locals usually know the quirks of
their neighborhood birds best, I’ll assume it was a Carolina Wren, record it
as an unknown passerine, and go back to hopefully track down the singer
again.



 Thank you Susan and John! Have a good bird-filled weekend!


Candace

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