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[[circled]] 15 [[/circled]]
Then see single Firebelly and single Sooty Thrush about 4 ft apart in small tree (same tree where the two species were seen together earlier). 
[[margin, in red]] 33 [[/margin]] 
Both silent. [[red check mark]] Firebelly flies off. Thrush does not follow.
[[margin, in red]] 34 [[/margin]] 
Then see single [[red check mark]] Dubusia.  Definitely alone. Singing. 40 ft up in tall, mature isolated tree edge pasture. Flies off into low scrub.
[[margin, in red]] 36 [[/margin]] 
Then see [[two red check marks]] pair Firebellies alone, small trees, 10 ft up. Quiet.
[[margin, in red]] 37 [[/margin]] 
Some distance away, see [[red check mark]] Yellowbelly fly over area mixed pasture and very low scattered scrub. Flying low.
7:50 See Dubusia alone. Singing in low scrub. 2-3 ft above ground.
[[image: drawing of bird]]
In posturi comme ca.
Some CR & Thflff.
Proportions more or less correct
Very finch-like
See more Single Sooty Thrushes alone.
It is clouding over now 7:55 am. Fog approaching in distance
Wind also increasing a little
[[margin, in red]] 38 [[/margin]]
Again catch brief glimpse Dubusia [[red check mark]] 2 ft up low scattered scrub.
Silent. Definitely alone. Obviously same individual seen before. 
Fog coming in 8:45 am. Still very thin
A thought has just struck me. I have not seen or heard White-bearded flycatchers here this morning yet. 
Does this mean that they are away, travelling with some mixed flock elsewhere?
Everything has suddenly turned [[underline]] very [[/underline]] quiet - now that fog is
coming in. The fog here certainly does [[underline]] not [[/underline]] seem to have stimulated
either vocaliz