This site is closed to new comments and posts.

Notice: This site uses cookies to function.
If you are not comfortable with cookies then please don't browse this website.

Middle of the Night Bird Noises - Page 2 — Brooklynian

Middle of the Night Bird Noises

2»

Comments

  • Brooke Lynn.. I hesitate to comment.. This is the first night in a while I hear nothing and it is after 2am... We shall see,,,,

    So you think the "nesting" thing had something to do with this incessant noise??

    Gee if so .. I hope the maternity ward is closed and the noise is permanently gone.
  • I think this bird moved to the vicinity of our backyard. Although it was 4:21 in the morning when I was awakened by it, this bird was chirping like a "laser gun."
  • "If that mockingbird won't sing, I'm going to buy you a diamond ring."
  • (a bird poem)

    satan's little bird

    why do you mock me each night

    agog on a log
  • A little late but I did hear some birds in the front of the house late in the evening for about a week. We sleep in the front but I have a noise ocean sounding machine. I'll take bird sounds over car service idiots honking at 3am. Couple of months ago we had a woodpecker in the back. One evening my husband heard some guy yell SHUT UP WOODPECKER. Quite funny actually. Anyone here?

    veets 3 million? Am I behind in park slope real estate news?
  • I heard what I believe was the famous PS mockingbird last night at around 1 am. VERY loud song, imitating a number of other birds (not being an ornithologist, I couldn't tell you which!). Not sure how long the "concert" went on for, as thankfully I fell asleep again. I'm on 10th Street, between 6th and 7th Avenues. Anyone else in the vicinity hear it too?
  • eggcream wrote: A little late but I did hear some birds in the front of the house late in the evening for about a week. We sleep in the front but I have a noise ocean sounding machine. I'll take bird sounds over car service idiots honking at 3am. Couple of months ago we had a woodpecker in the back. One evening my husband heard some guy yell SHUT UP WOODPECKER. Quite funny actually. Anyone here?

    veets 3 million? Am I behind in park slope real estate news?
    Clarify the real estate part of the question. Are you saying that buildings in PS would not be sold for at least 3 million? If so.. I wouldn't agree on that one.
  • veets wrote:

    I hope the maternity ward is closed and the noise is permanently gone.
    looks like sooner or later, all PS'ers come around to hating breeding... :wink:
  • I live nearby and also hear the mockingbird, in fact, he's a yearly visitor. He's my spring herald as he usually arrives in April. I kind of like his vocalizations, mainly because I study bird songs and it has become a game identifying his string of mimics. Sometimes he surprises me with a bird song I wouldn't expect, like a whip-poor-will. I actually have a photo of ole' Blabbermouth that I took from an adjacent roof.

    http://citybirder.blogspot.com/2007/05/memorial-day-after-some-technical.html

    If it makes you feel any better, the hawks in the cemetery have been regularly dining on mockingbirds. They must be easy pickin's because they're so busy announcing their presence that they aren't paying attention. There's one in the cemetery (at least used to be) that regularly made Red-tailed Hawk calls. Was he asking to be eaten?

    The one at 5th Street is in the sights of a young pair of hawks that recently moved to the hood and hang around the north end of the park. If he's not careful, this could be Blabbermouth's last year in the slope.
  • Forget the nesting theory. I can hear the racket right now. I have already put the a/c on so I am sure I will fall asleep. Is this the first year anyone has heard this noise or what?
  • I love our northern mockingbird; he's an opera singer. But even Caruso can be a pain if you're trying to sleep. One theory is urban mockingbirds that sing at night will sit facing the brightest light available. (Shows off their plumage.) If you have a backyard light, try turning it off or shading it.
  • hoestead wrote: It's definitely a live bird. It sings on my block every night (starts around 12- 12:15). I live on 8th Street between 4th + 5th Aves. It likes one particular tree under a bright streetlight.

    I spent several hours on Saturday night goggling bird calls trying to figure out if it is a Nightingale or a Mockingbird. When I walk my dogs late, I actually stand under the tree where it hangs out laughing at its audacity and marvel at its huge repertoire!

    The past few mornings it has moved into the backyard (between 8th + 7th streets). I'll be happy when its spring fling is over!
    My husband met our bird face to face! He was walking the dogs on 8th st bet 4th and 5th and as Hoe said the bird was wailing up in the tree.

    Hey Hoe.. you wouldn't haven to own a Portuguese Water Dog?
  • Subject: why birds sing at night

    City birds sing for silent nights

    Robins in urban areas are singing at night because it is too noisy during the day, researchers suggest.

    Scientists from the University of Sheffield say there is a link between an area's daytime noise levels and the number of birds singing at night.

    Until now, light pollution had been blamed because it was thought that street lights tricked the birds into thinking it was still daytime.

    The findings are published in the Royal Society journal Biology Letters.

    "You generally only seem to hear nocturnal singing in cities," explained Richard Fuller, one of the study's co-authors.

    "So this led us to think that there was some aspect of the urban environment that was driving this phenomenon."

    Shedding light

    Light pollution had been widely held as the prime suspect. It was thought to prevent the birds from roosting, leading to them remaining active through the hours of darkness.

    "That was the stock answer you would get," Dr Fuller said, "that it was basically tricking the birds into thinking it was daylight and tripping some sort of physiological threshold.

    "But we thought that was pretty unlikely because birds are much more complex than that."

    He said that there had never been a scientific study to measure the impact of light pollution on the behaviour of urban robins.

    "So we went out and measured both noctural light and daytime noise levels and we found that daytime noise had a far stronger effect.

    "We found that night-time light had a small effect, but very much smaller than the impact of noise levels."

    This led the team to conclude that it was an active decision by the birds to sing at night rather than passively responding to light levels.

    "The birds appear to be singing at night to avoid competition with high noise levels caused by our cities during the day," Dr Fuller suggested.

    "Noise levels were 10 times higher in places where birds were singing at night."

    The findings form a part of a seven-year research programme by the university's Department of Animal and Plant Sciences to measure the impact of urbanisation on biodiversity.

    Story from BBC NEWS:
    http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/science/nature/6591649.stm
    Published: 2007/04/25 12:21:53 GMT
    © BBC MMVII
  • (another bird poem)

    city born song bird

    you mock us with your bird song

    i have longed for sleep
  • Sandcastler.. The knowledge I have gained through your post gives me no comfort!! This thread started with my lis-conceived idea that this sounds was a recording. Being a native New Yorker.. that could have led to an easy solution... Shoot the s....n of a B who was playing that recording!! So here I sit and no kidding I just would not hurt an animal so once again goin to sleep with closed windows, the a/c up and the radio on.
  • Gak! Veets' house is worth 3 mil. Awesome!
  • Germfree..... I lied



    The house is probably worth more than that..

    Lol
  • Bird alert!

    yeah Mr. MockingBird was doing the thing late night in to early morning hour.
  • Since he's announcing his territory and won't stop until the breeding season is over, maybe you can beat him at his own game. Mockingbirds mimic what they hear, so give him new input. Put your speakers up on the roof during the day and play something painfully lethargic. How about "The Magic of Zamfir, the Undisputed King of the Pan Flute"? He may not stop singing, but his late-night rants will either lull you to sleep or bore you to death.
  • Sorry - I know this thread is dead, but. . .

    I Googled up Zanfir . . .

    How ironic is the quote on this site . . .

    Pan's Pipes Have
    A Modern Master in ZAMFIR
    Michael Small, People Magzine
    Please Visit: Pan-Flute.Com

    Fans who hear it on their record players claim it soothes the soul like a sweet birdcall.

    Haha, soothes the soul like a bird call . . . .
Sign In or Register to comment.