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This brightly colored songbird, perched conspicuously on a weathered stump, is the male Common Chaffinch (Fringilla coelebs). During the breeding season, males are unmistakable due to their striking color combination a bluish-grey crown and nape, a rosy-pink breast and face, and an olive-brown mantle. I have spent countless hours across European forests observing this widespread species, noting how the broad, prominent white bars on its wings serve as key field marks both in flight and at rest, contrasting sharply with the darker feathers. Its stout, conical bill confirms its primary diet of seeds, though insects are essential for feeding young. Throughout my decades of researching avian acoustics, the Chaffinchs loud, complex, and distinct song, a fast-paced cascade ending in a flourish, is a signature sound of spring woodlands. This species demonstrates both territorial vigor and a high degree of sociality outside of the nesting period.