Songster wren
This Carolina wren (Thryothorus ludovicianus) kept singing away as I moved on the patio to get a better background. Their song is so bright and loud for their size although sometimes it hard to localize.
The Cornell Labs says this about their song, "Unlike other wren species in its genus, only the male Carolina Wren sings the loud song. In other species, such as the Stripe-breasted Wren of Central America, both members of a pair sing together. The male and female sing different parts, and usually interweave their songs such that they sound like a single bird singing."
Songster wren
This Carolina wren (Thryothorus ludovicianus) kept singing away as I moved on the patio to get a better background. Their song is so bright and loud for their size although sometimes it hard to localize.
The Cornell Labs says this about their song, "Unlike other wren species in its genus, only the male Carolina Wren sings the loud song. In other species, such as the Stripe-breasted Wren of Central America, both members of a pair sing together. The male and female sing different parts, and usually interweave their songs such that they sound like a single bird singing."