A BIRD IN THE HAND
The place for song canary information!


WELCOME!

Song Canary Breeds

Although I have raised lots of kinds of birds over the years, my current priority is in the breeding and training of song canaries for competition at song contests. There are four main breeds of song canaries currently raised and shown in the United States: German roller, Belgian waterslager, Spanish timbrado, and American singer. Each is known for a different kind of song: the roller for hollow rolling tours, the waterslager for deep watery tours, the timbrado for metallic tours, and the American singer for a combination of the sounds of the roller and the "chops" of a border canary. I breed waterslagers, also called malinois and timbrados; I have bred American singers and rollers, also called harzers, in the past. If they are to be shown in competition, each breed must be kept apart from the other or the young males may spoil their songs by mimicking the sounds of members of the other breeds.

To email Sebastian, click the
​image above.

I am a Past President of United Spanish Timbrado Fanciers (USTF) and have been on the Board of Directors of Western Waterslager Club (WWC).  Please feel free to contact me about either of these wonderful organizations!

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NEW:  THE FOLLOWING ARE MY BOOKS ON SONG CANARIES.  YOU CAN CONTACT ME TO RECEIVE ANY OF THE FILES FREE OF CHARGE.


EL GRAN TENOR (password--ustfagogo)

file:///C:/Users/svall/Downloads/El%20Gran%20Tenor.PDF


​SONG CANARIES VOLUME 1

file:///C:/Users/svall/Downloads/Song%20Canaries%20vol.%201.pdf


SONG CANARIES VOLUME 2

file:///C:/Users/svall/Downloads/Song%20Canaries%20vol.%202.pdf


SONG CANARIES VOLUME 3
file:///C:/Users/svall/Downloads/Song%20Canaries%20vol.%203.pdf


A Very Brief History of the Spanish Timbrado, the German Roller, the Belgian Waterslager, and the American Singer:

The wild canary was first imported to Europe by the Spaniards as early as the 1470's. From the start, it was the canary's ability to sing that was most important. In Spain the first steps toward domestication occurred as religious houses, always eager to find another way to support themselves, began breeding the canaries for sale. As the birds became popular with the royalty of Europe, prices increased tremendously, and it would be some time before commoners could afford to keep them.

While the voice and look of the canary changed very little over time in Spain, great changes were beginning to happen in places like France, Germany, and Belgium about 300 years ago.

​Breeding programs at the beginning of the 1700's were yielding changes in the appearance and sound of the canaries bred in these countries. In 1713 a travel guide written by a French visitor to Belgium mentioned the watery notes of the canaries near Mechelen. Eventually, these birds would be crossed with the Large Yellow canary, a descendant of the Old Dutch, to form the modern waterslager.

​At about the same time, breeders may have begun to experiment with tutoring canaries with nightingales in both Belgium and Germany. In Germany this yeilded a line of birds with a very smooth style of singing which was eventually developed into the roller canary through the selection of the smoothest singers by the Harz Mountain region's miner-breeders. Over time this smoothness was further modified into the deep sound we hear today by the now famous breeders of the mountain village of Sankt Andreasberg, Germany.

​The Spanish canaries developed into many local variations over time. The most noteworthy was the Vich canary, known for its pure flute tours. These variations were back bred to the ancestral wild canary starting in the 1930's, and eventually this led to the development of the timbrado.

The American singer's history began in the U.S. in the 1930's when a group of breeders decided that the song of the roller was becoming too soft and unvaried for the average American household. They began to systematically cross breed rollers to the most popular of the "chopper-voiced" breeds of the day, the Border Fancy, a type canary that had been bred for its shape and not its voice. The original goal was to achieve a bird that was about 69% roller and 31% Border. Today, although there are still score components for the shape and condition of the bird and the club constitution still calls for the roller/Border cross, an American singer may also have bloodlines from other song canary breeds, especially the waterslager.

My name is Sebastian Vallelunga, and I am a teacher at Sacred Heart Cathedral Preparatory in the heart of San Francisco, California. However, this site, as you might guess from its name, is dedicated to my hobby: aviculture. Aviculture, or caring for and raising birds, has its roots in many ancient cultures. The ancient Greeks, Romans, Egyptians, Mesopotamians, and Chinese all raised birds for food, for their beauty, and for their songs. When Europeans like Columbus first encountered the people of the Americas, they discovered that here, too, birds were being kept.

A BIRD IN THE HAND
The place for song canary information!


Another team bred and trained by me: Western Waterslager Club Contest 2011, Best Team #12--467 points (the second highest scoring team in the US that year).

​YouTube Song Sample of My Western Waterslager Club
​Contest 2011, Best Team--467 points
​​

One of the winning song canary teams I have been fortunate enough to have bred and trained over the years. Western Waterslager Club Contest 2005, Best Team #22--468 points (the highest
​scoring team in the US that year).

WWC

FOR MORE WAYS TO CONTACT SEBASTIAN,
​CLICK ON THE IMAGE ABOVE

My Contest Results Over the Years:

​Western Waterslager Club
  • ​​2004 (Novice Year) Team scored all above 90 points
  • 2005 Best Team, 3rd Best Team, 2nd and 3rd Best Birds Overall,
    Best Staltonen, Best Bol, Best Chor
  • 2006 Best Belrol
  • 2007 Best Bol
  • 2008 2nd Best Team, 3rd Best Team, 2nd Best Bird Overall
  • 2009 Best Bellen
  • 2011 Best Team, Best Bird Overall, Best Bol, Best Staltonen,
    ​Best Fluitrol

United Spanish Timbrado Fanciers (with SCVCEBC)

USTF Champion Breeder

USTF Master Breeder

  • 2005 (Novice Year) Best Team
  • 2006 Best Bird Overall
  • 2007 Best Bird Overall, 2nd Best Bird Overall
  • 2008 No Contests Entered
  • 2009 No Contests Entered (Due to Judging)
  • 2010 3rd Best Bird Overall, 3rd Best Individual
  • 2017 Best Bird Overall, Best Team, 2nd Best Team, 2nd Best Individual, 3rd Best Individual
Serinus canaria

The wild canary of the
​Canary Islands

The photo above shows a wild canary in its native habitat. The wild canary is the main ancestor of all breeds of domestic canary no matter what size, shape, posture, texture, color, or sound. Different breeds are split into various categories of canaries: the type canaries (size, shape), the position canaries (posture), the frilled canaries (texture), the color canaries (color), and the song canaries (sound). Please see the photo page for images of some of the song breeds of canary. The Spanish timbrado song canary is said to be closest to its original ancestor, and many of them look very much like the specimen above.

A White Song Canary in His Song Cage

CONTENTS OF THE ARTICLES PAGES:

General Info

G. Lelievre:  Excerpt from Notions on the Heredity of Song Canaries

Canary Basic Care Sheet 

Molting vs. Singing: What to Do About a Canary That Won’t Sing

Vicente Gomez Coronado: "Song Learning in the Canary: Parts I and II"--translated from Spanish.

Ramon Monfort Sanchez: "Applied Genetics"--translated from Spanish.

Efrain Valerio-Charpentier: "On the Inheritance of the Song Canary: Parts I and II"--translated from Spanish.

Appearence in Song Canaries

Bird Art

Waterslagers

ACAU Article: "Malinois Waterslager"--translated from Italian.

From Le Canari de Chant Malinois-Waterslager Website: "History"--translated from French.

Gustaaf Lelievre and Mariela di Mauro: "The Malinois Canary"--translated from Spanish.

Armand Van De Vonder: "The Cultivation of Malinois Waterslagers: Information on Selection"--translated from Spanish. (This article is followed by illustrative audio links to nightingale song.)

Le Canari de Chant Malinois-Waterslager Website: "Silent Song"--translated from French.

Waterslager Breed Information Sheet

Timbrados

Sebastian Vallelunga:  Excerpt from El Gran Tenor

Antonio Drove Aza: "Justifying an Opinion on the Canary Called Spanish Timbrado"--translated from Spanish.

Timbrado Breed
Information Sheet

Rollers

Carmen Perez de Cortes: "The Characteristics and Mechanism of Song in Roller Canaries"--translated from Spanish.

The Technical Commission on Roller Song of Spain: "Commentaries and Criteria of Judgement of Roller Song in Spain"--translated from Spanish.

Originally from Kanarienvogel Magazine: "Roller Canaries in Sankt Andreasberg"--translated from Spanish.

American Singers

Sebastian Vallelunga: "The American Singer vs. An American Singer?"

Sebastian Vallelunga:  "A Proposed Amendment to the ASC Constitution"

Links

BE SURE TO CHECK OUT THIS
​LINK TO THE
AVICULTURAL ENCYCLOPEDIA
CONTAINING EVEN MORE OF MY TRANSLATIONS AND ORIGINAL ARTICLES

BE SURE TO CHECK OUT THE AUDIO LINKS TO BIRD SONG ON THE LINKS PAGE!

A JIGSAW FEATURE CAN BE FOUND
​ON THE LINKS PAGE!

This site is perpetually under construction!

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USTF

"Puff, have you seen the canary?"
​CLICK ON PUFF'S IMAGE TO SIGN MY GUEST BOOK