Merlin was on the job at Westwood Hills Nature Center in St. Louis Park one recent day, helping birders identify bird songs. Not Merlin the storied magician, although what was happening could be likened to magic.
This Merlin is a smartphone app that first records birdsong, and then does very well at putting a name to the singer. I can vouch for that.
The bird walk was organized by a man named Vic Lewis, a migrant, like a bird, summering in his home territory near Westwood after wintering in Arizona.
There were 15 of us, including me and friend Peter, both of us relying on Ye Olde identification method that used recordings in our heads, not our phones.
We learned bird calls/songs by repeated listenings to songs commercially recorded on vinyl records or tape cassettes (remember those?).
This day, some of the walk participants moved along the paths with one hand outstretched as though expecting a gift. They were holding their phone face up, using the Merlin app in recording phase, awaiting assignment of a species name to the sounds.
Merlin is the product of the wizards at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology in New York state. It is free, available online at the Apple app store or Google Play, and it is amazing.

The Merlin website explains: “Sound ID listens to the birds around you and shows real-time suggestions for who’s singing. Compare your recording to the songs and calls in Merlin to confirm what you heard.