An interesting topic came up about the virtues of birding without binoculars. I have only really done this when I’ve forgotten my binoculars but had some desire/need to go out anyway. One time, it ended up being a fun exercise for someone I was mentoring in their beginning birding journey. First off, it’s humbling: you’re […]
Continue reading..Thoughts on Birding Without BinocularsI finally wrote a post that fits all of my blog categories! 🙂 Years ago, Dr. T. Mitchell Aide visited my former lab and I had an opportunity to meet with him. Hearing about his work with automated classification of bird calls first got my mind churning about how we can use ARU’s for gathering […]
Continue reading..Autonomous Recording Units for BirdsThis is not an exhaustive list of open source tools and programs to produce spectrograms; if you have a favorite I missed, please add it in the comments! Tools Python: some tutorials and example scripts using the following libraries… NumPy, SciPy and matplotlib Custom functions written with numpy Pylab WarbleR Programs Baudline Sonic Visualizer Friture Music Lab
Continue reading..Open Source Spectrogram Tools & ProgramsI took a dive into iPhone apps that produce spectrograms of recorded sound, with an interest in bird song (of course). I got into spectrograms looking at the figures in Handbook of Bird Biology. I’m mainly looking for something that I can match to Field Guide to Bird Sounds, with the thought that this could […]
Continue reading..Comparison of Spectrogram AppsLike anything else, learning bird songs takes practice and close attention. Here are some resources and my experiences that may help guide you. How I Learned Mnemonic/Sound Pattern Recognition: When I took ornithology in undergrad, we used Peterson’s Birding by Ear which groups songs by characteristics and thereby teaches you to listen for broad characteristics, […]
Continue reading..Resources for Learning to Identify Bird SongI’ve started a game on Twitter, running weekly with the hash tag: #namethatbirdsong Every Weds 12pm I’ll post a bird song, and you tweet your own original (or post for a friend with attribution) mnemonic device, that differs from the widely accepted mnemonics taught for the posted bird song (#altmnemonic) along with the game hash […]
Continue reading..My Twitter Game: #NameThatBirdSongThanks to a conversation with my friend, Dr. Kaitlin Stack Whitney, over Twitter, I learned that there’s an entire field of study that is poised to look formally into some of the concepts that have been nebulously floating about in my mind about how we process bird songs. Most recently, I’ve been interested in mnemonics, […]
Continue reading..Ecomusicology & Bird Song MnemonicsIn these days of tech addiction, it seems always a struggle to balance how much I should use my iPhone! “Modern day birding” is no help. 🙂 In fact, it’s the main reason I can’t justify deleting social media from my phone. Ironically, an activity that otherwise immerses us in nature is wrapped up in […]
Continue reading..Birding w/my iPhoneToday I fought my cold and went birding in the rain and 50’s°F to look for a Pacific loon reported in the morning. Unfortunately I didn’t find it, but I did find a red-necked grebe on the lake. I walked down to the beach next to the water treatment plant and looked for rocks. After the rain picked up, […]
Continue reading..Burlington Bay: Lake View Park & WTPI use Google Drive through google-drive-ocamlfuse because it has a native mount, so it looks/acts much like the folder you’d be accustomed to on Windows. However, it’s much slower to sync, so be aware of that (i.e. it doesn’t do what the Windows side does, which is to make a folder and sync on its […]
Continue reading..Some Tidbits (& Tid-Bytes?) for Linux