Celebrating the Dawn Chorus of Birdsong

This is a special episode of the podcast to coincide with International Dawn Chorus Day, which is celebrated in over 80 countries worldwide and has been running since the 1980s. It brings people together to listen to one of the most amazing spectacles in the natural world - the cacophony of birdsong at this time of year. This episode is a short recording of a walk I did on this morning in early May, covering some of the birds I can hear at my local nature reserve. If you’re interested in hearing the dawn chorus, then you can go out and find it in your local garden, park, nature reserve or woodland. If you’d like to learn about birdsong or do it as part of a group then lots of organisations run birdsong and dawn chorus events, like the National Trust, the RSPB and the Wildlife Trusts. As I promised during the episode, here are a few of the birds I heard and some of the more common ones you might hear if you go out and listen for yourself: Blackcap https://bit.ly/2IgiD0J Goldcrest https://bit.ly/2FNrfXm Chiffchaff https://bit.ly/2HRYYFb Song thrush https://bit.ly/2JSyfog Blackbird https://bit.ly/2rnbH8l Cuckoo https://bit.ly/2JXoZiG Willow warbler https://bit.ly/2FNNtbY Great tit https://bit.ly/2FLDcwU Skylark https://bit.ly/2rmhRWs Robin https://bit.ly/2rpVyOI Whitethroat https://bit.ly/2jySSe3 The Wild Voices Project podcast tells the stories of people saving nature. We are part of WILDVoices media, a global production team bridging emerging storytellers with aspiring environmental professionals. Find out more about us at wildvoicesproject.org. Learn more about the global community at wild-voices.org.

Om Podcasten

Podcast by Matt Williams