Birds at the dock

June 18, 2026: 10 species identified by BirdNET listening to the dock microphone. Eastern Bluebird was the most active with 100 calls; Great Crested Flycatcher traveled farthest, a 5,000 mi round trip.

Calls by hour

Each bar counts distinct 30-second windows in which BirdNET identified a species at high confidence, bucketed by Eastern Time hour. The dawn chorus typically peaks between 6 and 8 a.m.

☀ SUNRISE 6:22 AMSUNSET ☾ 8:57 PM01225375012 AM4 AM8 AMNOON4 PM8 PM

Species heard

Eastern Bluebird
100 calls
Eastern Bluebird
Carolina Wren
36 calls
Carolina Wren
Osprey
19 calls
Osprey
Great Crested Flycatcher
11 calls · 5,000 mi round trip
Great Crested Flycatcher
Northern Cardinal
9 calls
Northern Cardinal
Red-bellied Woodpecker
9 calls
Red-bellied Woodpecker
Northern Rough-winged Swallow
5 calls
Northern Rough-winged Swallow
Tree Swallow
4 calls · 3,700 mi round trip
Tree Swallow
Carolina Chickadee
3 calls
Carolina Chickadee
Prothonotary Warbler
2 calls
Prothonotary Warbler

How this works

A microphone is mounted at the dock at Tennessee River Mile 559.5, listening to the lake 24/7. Audio runs through BirdNET from the Cornell Lab of Ornithology, an open-source neural network that identifies bird species by sound. Detections at high confidence are tallied here.

Bird photos are pulled automatically from Wikipedia and cropped to the bird with YOLOv8 object detection. Individual photo credits are on each species' Wikipedia page.