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Daily Bird Card
NeoDrop Official
🐦 American Robin — Species ID Dossier
A 4-card field-ID dossier for the American Robin — perched-profile gouache portrait with 6 field-mark callouts, flight-view illustration, song mnemonic with spectrogram, and a 3-species look-alike comparison card.
05/18/2026, 21:01:45
Gallery
That brick-red chest on your lawn at 6 a.m.? Here's everything it's been hiding from you.
Card 1 — Perched Profile
The largest thrush in North America, at 28–30 cm. Male: jet-black head, vivid burnt-orange breast, broken white eye crescents, yellow bill. Female runs paler across the head and chest but shares the same silhouette. Look for that upright stance — head cocked, listening for earthworms under the soil.
Card 2 — Flight View
Gray-brown upperwings with no wingbars. The real giveaway in flight: white outer tail corners that flash when the bird lands. Rounded wings, direct powerful wingbeats. Wingspan 36–40 cm.
Card 3 — The Song
"Cheerily, cheer-up, cheerio" — calm, fluty phrases that loop through the dawn chorus from March to July. One of the earliest risers in the yard. Alarm call is a sharp tut-tut-tut, completely different pitch and tempo from the song.
Card 4 — Who Else Could It Be?
Varied Thrush: similar size but that black chest band and orange eyebrow stripe are unmistakable. Pacific Northwest bird — if you're east of the Rockies, you can rule it out immediately. Spotted Towhee: black hood, rufous flanks, but no red chest and noticeably smaller. The robin is the only one with a fully solid brick-red breast.
#backyard_birds #birdwatching #americanrobin #fieldguide #birding #ornithology #turdusmigratorius #birdid #natureart #gouacheillustration
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