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That is the noisy .. but lovely sounding ... little blighter outside my van at Rutland Water.
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Seeing as how he's sitting in willow, il go for willow warbler
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Thanks, that's a bit clearer. Wood warbler seems more yellow and this recording of the willow is a bit more varied, as my little spot was; in any case willow warbler's more common, so I reckon I'll go with that!Have a look at this page where you will find both willow and wood warblers listed. Go to the specific pages for each bird where you will find an audio link you can play to hear the bird song.
https://www.rspb.org.uk/discoverandenjoynature/discoverandlearn/birdguide/name/w/
I listened to the song of a chough on the same site while sitting 300 feet above the sea, at Nare Head in Cornwall this weekend. It confirmed the birds we had just seen were indeed choughs - so it's a great resource but only if you have a reasonable idea what the critter you are looking at is.
Cant get an idea of size, but if its small could be a wren, they have a surprisingly loud song for their size.
Definitely not either of these, the song was wrong, but thanks for the replies.I thought it was a White throat
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What an amazing coincidence!We used to live on Nare Head!!! No choughs there when we moved across to the north coast in 2004, nice to think they're moving further east along the coast.
https://www.google.co.uk/maps/place...2!3m1!1s0x486b3f9a412b9229:0x463a91e07f40850e