I've been trying to improve my knowledge of bird songs and find whilst some are easy some are surprisingly hard to identify as often you hear the song and rarely see or get a good look at the bird itself. I've tried a few bird song identification app, most aren't worth the time of downloading.
However, I have now struck gold and thought I woulD share with anyone else who like to identify what birds are singing.
Its an experimental app called BirdNET, whats more it's free and there are no adverts. Google store has it for android, not sure if a version for apple exists.
It's simple to use, turn it on it starts recording, you can see a graph of what you are hearing. Use one finger to identify the start and drag finger over area you want analysing and press analyse. It comes back with an identification and a certainty level for that identification. Sp far it's 100% correct on everything I knew and I never knew we had so many linnets in one the forests I walk through... Makes walking slightly more enjoyable in these dark days of lockdown.
Try it and let us know how you get on.
However, I have now struck gold and thought I woulD share with anyone else who like to identify what birds are singing.
Its an experimental app called BirdNET, whats more it's free and there are no adverts. Google store has it for android, not sure if a version for apple exists.
It's simple to use, turn it on it starts recording, you can see a graph of what you are hearing. Use one finger to identify the start and drag finger over area you want analysing and press analyse. It comes back with an identification and a certainty level for that identification. Sp far it's 100% correct on everything I knew and I never knew we had so many linnets in one the forests I walk through... Makes walking slightly more enjoyable in these dark days of lockdown.
Try it and let us know how you get on.