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    Brooklyn Bird Watch: Gray Catbird

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    Today, Brooklyn Bird Watch features an excellent Heather Wolfย photo of the Gray Catbird. The Gray Catbird is all over gray except for a prominent skull cap of black feathers on top of its head. It also has a small russet-colored area of feathers under its tail.

    If you have ever heard a catbird you will agree that it really does sound like a cat. Gray Catbirds are relatives of mockingbirds and thrashers, and they share similar vocal abilities.ย  Like the Mockingbird, they copy the sounds of other species and string those sounds together, making their own song.

    Youโ€™ve probably at least heard of the expression โ€œsitting in the catbird seatโ€, which indicates being in an advantageous position. It was Red Barber, the Hall of Fame radio announcer for none other than the Brooklyn Dodgers for almost 15 years back in the 1940s and 50s who helped popularize the expression โ€œsitting in the catbird seat,โ€ which meant โ€œsitting prettyโ€; for example, when a batter had three balls and no strikes on him.ย 

    Catbirds are cautious birds, they seldom fly in open areas.ย As the Cornell Lab of Ornithology points out, โ€œCatbirds are secretive but energetic, hopping and fluttering from branch to branch through tangles of vegetation. Singing males sit atop shrubs and small trees. Catbirds are reluctant to fly across open areas, preferring quick, low flights over vegetation.โ€

    Audubon describes the bird this way: โ€œRather plain but with lots of personality, the Gray Catbird often hides in the shrubbery, making an odd variety of musical and harsh sounds โ€” including the catlike mewing responsible for its name. At other times it moves about boldly in the open, jerking its long tail expressively. Most catbirds winter in the southern United States or the tropics, but a few linger far to the north if they have access to a reliable source of berries or a well-stocked bird feeder.โ€

    The Catbird nest, resembling a cup and usually built by the female, is comprised of any number of things, like twigs, weeds, grass, leaves, and sometimes pieces of trash, lined with rootlets and other fine materials.

    Some good news for bird lovers: According to Audubon the overall Catbird population, at least in the East, is apparently on the rise!

    This article first appeared on brooklyneagle.com

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    2 COMMENTS

    1. the catbirds I have known are incredibly territorial. I live in UNY not far from the ornithology lab you mention. We have watched these birds dive at and intimidate both our cats and dogs ( big Irish setters ) with abandonโ€ฆ.sending the cats under the car and dogs inside.
      Cats are not to be trifled with. Theyโ€™re patient and deadly.

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