Subject: who says seee seee su su sueee?
Date: Mar 22 10:15:20 2004
From: Mike Patterson - celata at pacifier.com


First guess: Brown Creeper (most likely)
Second Guess: Golden-crowned Kinglet
Third Guess: Ruby-Crowned Kinglet (long-shot since your
didn't include the "kitti-lee kitti-lee kitti-lee"
ending.


Subject: who says seee seee su su sueee? (Lincoln Park Seattle)
From: "Stewart Wechsler" <ecostewart AT quidnunc.net>
Date: Mon, 22 Mar 2004 09:58:30 -0800

In Lincoln Park in Seattle at 9am this morning I heard a high, thin, clear
and fairly weak "seee seee su su sueee" the "seee"'s higher pitched and the
"su"'s lower. The final "eee" at the end was the same pitch as the first
"seee". It sounded very warbler-like. I couldn't get a look at it. it was
in mixed forest of hemlock, douglas fir, madrone and red alder among others
apparantly high in the trees. Any thoughts?

Stewart Wechsler
West Seattle
mailto:ecostewart AT quidnunc.net
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--
Mike Patterson
Astoria, OR
celata at pacifier.com

Half-a-bee, philosophically must ipso-facto half not-be.
But half the bee, has got to bee Vis-a-vis its entity...
d'you see?
But can a bee be said to be or not to be an entire bee
When half the bee is not a bee due to some ancient injury?
-Monty Python

http://www.pacifier.com/~mpatters/bird/bird.html