Where have the whippoorwills gone?

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  • RED
    Very Senior Member - OFC
    • Aug 2009
    • 11689

    #1

    Where have the whippoorwills gone?

    One of my Hank Williams favorite songs was about whippoorwills.

    Hear that lonesome whippoorwill
    He sounds too blue to fly
    The midnight train is whining low
    I'm so lonesome, I could cry
    I've never seen a night so long
    And time goes crawling by
    The moon just went behind the clouds
    To hide its face and cry
    Did you ever see a robin weep
    When leaves begin to die?
    Like me, he's lost the will to live
    I'm so lonesome, I could cry
    The silence of a falling star
    Lights up a purple sky
    And as I wonder where you are
    I'm so lonesome, I could cry
    That's a good one
    It's a lonesome song, ain't it?
    Ain't that lonesome, woo
    Now you can't get any much lonesome right, can you?
    Want to whip a will so lonesome it can't fly
    He done got lonesome, man
    He needs some company, bad
    Source: Musixmatch
    Songwriters: Hank Williams Sr.
    I?m So Lonesome I Could Cry lyrics ? Sony/atv Acuff Rose Music

    They were everywhere 70 years ago. Back in 195o they kept us awake. My dad shot one that was sitting on our back porch. In the 1970's I heard them at daylight.

    I haven't heard ones call for 30+ years!
  • barretcreek
    Senior Member
    • Sep 2013
    • 6065

    #2
    Whip-poor-wills are doing poorly throughout most of their range. Partners in Flight lists them as a “Common Bird in Steep Decline”, and the North American Breeding Bird Survey estimates a 69% drop in populations between 1966 and 2010. There is no surplus population anywhere from which to take indivi


    Good observation. Can't be for a lack of mosquitoes.

    Comment

    • Allen
      Moderator
      • Sep 2009
      • 10583

      #3
      My wife has some distant relatives who were related to Hank Williams by marriage. In other words no relation at all. Her father was from Georgianna AL where Hank was raised. His childhood home there has been turned into a museum.

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      • dryheat
        Senior Member
        • Sep 2009
        • 10587

        #4
        My brother's girlfriend (never married) is a Cody (Buffalo Bill) Aside from that; That was a beautiful poem based on a bird. When some birds whistle, I can imitate them. I am not a great whistler. I like to pretend that they are responding, but it's just timing. That is a great blast from the past, with some addition.
        Last edited by dryheat; 03-13-2024, 07:51.
        If I should die before I wake...great,a little more sleep.

        Comment

        • jon_norstog
          Senior Member
          • Sep 2009
          • 3896

          #5
          All kinds of birds are way down from when I was a kid. Even up in the mountains, grouse are way down. I remember growing up about a half hour before sunrise the birdsong would start, hundreds of birds singing all their different songs. It is almost a silent world now, compared to then, except for the noise that humans make.

          jn

          Comment

          • Allen
            Moderator
            • Sep 2009
            • 10583

            #6
            Originally posted by jon_norstog
            All kinds of birds are way down from when I was a kid. Even up in the mountains, grouse are way down. I remember growing up about a half hour before sunrise the birdsong would start, hundreds of birds singing all their different songs. It is almost a silent world now, compared to then, except for the noise that humans make.

            jn
            Same down here.

            I use to see fields that were black from all the blackbirds. If something startled them and they all took off at once they darkened the sky, sometime for a few moments. They are mostly all gone now. Even Sparrows are scare now compared to 50 - 60 years ago.

            We've had a purple Martin bird house (12 compartment) set up for about 40 years now. My Mother always had one and had Martins every year. We had Martins the first year but nothing since except maybe one pair of Blue Birds every year.

            What we have a lot of now are doves. Not the mourning doves I use to hear out in the orchards. What we have now look the same but make the sound of a Coo Coo. It is their mating call and they must mate 11 and 1/2 months a year.

            Comment

            • barretcreek
              Senior Member
              • Sep 2013
              • 6065

              #7
              Ring Necked doves? Invasive species, no season or bag limit.

              Comment

              • Allen
                Moderator
                • Sep 2009
                • 10583

                #8
                Originally posted by barretcreek
                Ring Necked doves? Invasive species, no season or bag limit.
                Noise wise they are a REAL pest and like to stay close to homes. I would like to "ring their necks".

                Invasive--yes and perhaps why we don't have the mourning doves any longer that didn't bother anyone.
                Last edited by Allen; 03-14-2024, 07:43.

                Comment

                • dryheat
                  Senior Member
                  • Sep 2009
                  • 10587

                  #9
                  Doves are loud. I don't think they are the smartest birds. If I lived in the remote desert, a little dove music would be appreciated. I live in a neighborhood in America and they know that this is America where yoiu can just move in and make babies. OK, a little politics. Aside from that I have a lot of doves in my trees and they know that I will set out the hose for them to get a drink from. But,if I lived in the real desert I assume that there would be less annoying noise.
                  If I should die before I wake...great,a little more sleep.

                  Comment

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