Ouzel. The noble bearing of this bird harmonizes well with his romantic surroundings, as does also the song he whistles forth in the love season from his nest on the ledge of some hoary rock—a song which, though at times sweet and almost plaintive, is desultory and wild. His alarm-note is not unlike that of the blackbird, a bird, too, which he somewhat resembles; but his plumage, though black, is not so black as the sable chorister of our shrubberies, and he has a broad white crescent across the upper part of his breast. He belongs to the thrush family, and is often called the moor or mountain blackbird. The Peak of Derbyshire is a favourite breeding-place, but he is common enough on most of the high moorlands of our northern counties, and on Dartmoor, in Devonshire.
:? soz this is all i could find on the bird :?