Crows have more than 20 calls. The most common, a harsh caw, has several qualities and lengths that may serve different purposes. Immature begging young American Crows give a higher-pitched, nasal call that can sound like a Fish Crow. You may also hear a variety of calls and alert calls given to rally others to mob predators.

I must admit I've never heard of a Fish Crow so had to look it up. Unless you live in the USA it's not going to be that. I listened to one of its calls on the Cornell Labs website and it does sound like a duck quacking. If you can get a recording it would be interesting to hear it.


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Crow question:

I had a baby crow in the yard not able to fly yet. Adult crows overhead, angry. I was worried the cat would get it. I picked up the crow and walked it 75-100 yards to the park. I made the mistake of putting it some low bushes and not in the open so the adults would see it and know it was there. I fear they may not know where it went. They followed me home, angry. Question: do you think they will figure it out? Thanks.

Before we talk about the natural sounds that mark the change of seasons, I should mention two sounds that visitors always notice first. Both are not at the preserve itself, but close enough that the sound carries.

Then come the spring peepers, and overlapping with them but continuing later into spring, the American toads trilling loudly. Even fall and winter have their distinctive sounds as we hear geese migrating and owls calling more then.

The story started, as it often does, with a simple morning dog walk with Geordie. We were on our usual route when I saw a dog running towards us, off-leash. Geordie was very excited and I thought for a moment that perhaps it was a coyote. Once it got closer I could see it was a domestic dog, but very scared. Geordie, who assumes all dogs are his buddy, wanted to play and the ginger-coloured dog actually did let him get close enough for a sniff, before scooting off again. She did stay with us as we walked towards home and I was hoping I could lure her into our garden so I could read the tag on her collar.

There were, however, several crows in a tree, cawing angrily right there on the corner. That made me think that the dog might be hiding in the bushes that border the intersection, so I had a really good look around. No sight or sound of a dog. Maybe the crows were mad about something else.

Desire and I met up near where I last saw Mika and I could see that the crows were still cawing. This time I took Geordie up there and he seemed pretty excited about the bushes. After he sniffed at one spot for a while, I heard a very soft growl. I got down on my hands and knees, and very deep in the hedge, I spotted a flash of ginger fur.

Mika was rescued from the streets of Taiwan by Tina Huang, the founder of CERA (Canine Education and Rescue and Adoption). A team of CERA volunteers had been searching tireless for Mika since she went missing and Tina herself had flown in from Taiwan the day before she was found.

Another key ingredient to the rescue that day was Barbara Borchardt, who is the creator of the I Live in East Van blog. Barbara is someone who seems to know everyone in Vancouver and everything that is going on, so it was great luck that she happened to see my social media post of Mika hiding under the car. She immediately recognized Mika from the many posters the volunteers had put up, and efficiently managed to get me and Desire (one of the Mika search team) talking on the phone within minutes of the post going up.

A few days later I was contacted by the CERA group and we had the great pleasure of meeting Tina and other CERA dogs and owners, plus Mika herself at a meeting in Burnaby park. Tina had treats for Geordie and it was a lovely conclusion to the epic search for Mika.

What sound does a bird make? There are several types of bird sounds and they are categorized into three: bird calls, bird songs, and non-vocal sounds. Knowing how to distinguish each one will help you identify birds by the sound they are making.

Trip

That does not look like a good list to me,I would take all of the Crow sounds that FoxPro has but none of those bird sounds .The only bird sounds,that work for me,(stand alone no crow sounds inbedded ) are the hawk screams,and owl sounds. The Raven duet will work sometimes,if you have ravens around. Crows are very territorial,thats why other crow sounds work so well. Some of the bird sounds could work in run and hunting in the summer when crows are raiding song bird nests,but I just use crow distress sounds with hawk and owl sounds.

Trip, Depending on the type of crow hunting you are doing (run & gun, field shooting or flyway shooting) also is a major factor on what calls to choose from. Some calls you can use in all three types of gunning. For example: In run & gun where you move around a lot I would recomend my fighting call, distress call of a baby crow, excited crow call and distress call of an adult crow. The crows will come into these calls on the double! For field types of crow hunting I would recomend my come here call and recognition call, this will bring the birds in leisurly. For flyway hunting the fighting call is a proven crow killer, you can see me using all of the differen't fight calls in the two dvd's that I made over the past 9 years. One is called "Crow Shooting" and the other is called "The Art of Crow Hunting" both are sold right here at CrowMart the store! Look under Educational Material to find them. If you are a run & gunner it sure can't hurt to learn to use a hand call very well! CrowMart has some great deals, by that I mean that they have some very good hand calls for sale. Mincey, Gibson and Mallardtone to name a few. They also have a package deal where you can buy one of there hand calls and it comes with an instructional cd so you can learn what the differen't calls mean to the crows! Bob A.

To add to the confusion, there is apparently a ton of hybridization going on between Northwestern and American Crows, especially in the vicinity of Puget Sound. Eugene Hunn, author of Birding in Seattle and King County: Site Guide and Annotated List, and crow-lumping partisan, has an interesting perspective on the crow situation in the Puget Sound region:

The post generated quite a bit of discussion on the local (Oregon) birding list. There is a strong east-to-west size divergence between putative Northwestern Crows and American Crows in British Columbia, even south as far as Oregon. However, north-to-south sizes merge and vary in no discernible way.

@Greg Gillson: Thanks to the link to your (much more informed) blog post on this topic. Of all the birds I have seen this one seems most likely to be lumped, and it certainly seems justifiable from everything I have read. Do you (or anyone else out there) know of any DNA analysis that has been done?

If you are interested in starting a DNA record of Crow species by region, I have a feather retrieved (donated) by one of my friends,a crow. It was collected in Des Moines, WA within sight of Puget Sound.

Precise (GPS Lat/Lon) available.

Just visited southwest Colorado, coming from East Coast all my life and the crows there sound different. A much softer, kind of clucking or clicking sound. I wonder if the East Coast crows having to compete with all the noise pollution, developed a much more raucous call.

moinsen

I worked with the Arduino some years ago and now i have following question: I want a Arduino Nano in our birdhouse with a sound module. And it should be controled by a remote, so my mother can scare the crows, while watching tv. Can i use a normal smartphone cable with 5,2V? Are there moduls for remote? How would you build it?

Thanks alot and sorry for bad english

However much it may be amusing to do a project with Arduinox, "re-inventing the wheel" is generally no more than that - an amusement. What you initially described is indeed, a quite complete definition of a remote doorbell. You may however need some amplification

I'm not so sure about that. In my experience the presence of an owl or hawk will bring a flock of crows organized to harass the predator bird. The clap of hands, or a gunshot sound may be more likely to send the crows flying away.

cattledog:

I'm not so sure about that. In my experience the presence of an owl or hawk will bring a flock of crows organized to harass the predator bird. The clap of hands, or a gunshot sound may be more likely to send the crows flying away.

Oh yes. In that case I would recommend something like this where the timer mechanism is replaced with a remote controlled device like the remote doorbell the OP has considered. In fact, the project could also be marketed as a door bell for the hard of hearing.

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Hi,


Use to be used in vinyards and orchards.

The few that I saw had a programming interface so you could program active times and regular or random firing times.

The used PIC if I remember rightly.

Also fitted with auto garage door opener button so they could be remote fired.


Locating A Hung-up turkey with a crow call draws less attention to you, and may allow you to move in to a better position undetected.

Photo by: AuthorWhen I choose a crow call I look for a few key attributes:

Second, it needs to be loud. While contending with all the other daytime noise such as wind, traffic, other birds, etc, being loud is extremely important so the sound will carry and strike gobbles at a greater distance.

So, next time you go turkey hunting, make sure you grab your crow call and put it in your vest. Hopefully this will help you be a little more effective next time you head in to the spring turkey woods. Best of luck, hunt hard, and hunt safe. 

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