Good Morning All,

The Golden-crowned Sparrow appeared under the platform feeder at 7:38 A.M. this morning. Not near as many birds at the feeders as during the winter, but still the same species. I was surprised to see a lone Pine Siskin come in to the feeder area.

At Ship Rock things were busy. Saw both Peregrines flying as well as perched on ledges on Ship Rock. At one point I saw what I believe is the female PEFA land on a ledge (leading to a previous eyrie), face inward, sort of stamp her feet and look inward. What I believe is the male exploded out of the eyrie and started low before gaining altitude and flying around showing off his flying skills. Shortly thereafter the female landed on top of high perch on Ship Rock, called, and then the male came in and landed behind her and they copulated vigorously(10 seconds?). The male then took off flying high and the female remained perched on top of the rock.

As far as the Ravens were concerned, in the half hour I was there, the male came in twice, called to the female, she then left the nest for a short time and joined the male. Once he flew to the base of the cliff, where the female joined him and they exchanged food???, before the female flew to the west calling as she flew and landed in a juniper on the hillside. She stayed briefly before flying back to the nest. The male then took off and flew to the SE. The other time the male called from up on the hillside, and the female left the nest and joined him for a few minutes. She then flew back to the nest calling as she flew and the male left again.

There were also a number of American Kestrels in the Ship Rock vicinity as well as the pair at the first fork in the road when you come in Entrance #3.

Mike Henwood
Morrison
Jefferson County

--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Colorado 
Birds" group.
To post to this group, send email to [email protected].
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
[email protected].
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/cobirds?hl=en.

Reply via email to