The cemetery was beautiful and full of interesting things today:

Confirmed the very recent hatch of two young in the tripledecker Broad-tailed 
Hummingbird nest

Watched a different female hummer near her first-time nest flycatching for 
mosquitoes

FOY fledged American Robin and Chipping Sparrow

Youth gangs of European Starlings with too much time, everywhere in the grass

Got photos of the last Chipping Sparrow nestling in the nest at the end of a 
low Colorado Blue Spruce branch

Photographed parent Chipping Sparrow feeding a recently fledged youngster a 
combination of vegetable matter (new leaf?) and yellow insect larvae

Found all three sibling Great Horned Owls from this year's nest together on a 
green ash branch some 100 yards from their birthplace elm (wonder when they'll 
split up?)

Saw a Common Grackle carrying something big from the flowing ditch to the base 
of a lilac (shooed off the bird and found a live, medium-sized crayfish!  Once 
I saw a grackle eating a crayfish but suspected it was an act of scavenging.  
Maybe grackles routinely catch live crayfish.)

FOY young fox running across the golf course

Western Wood-Pewee working over the ditch for millers (about every other year 
pewees nest at Grandview)

Watched newly-fledged Black-capped Chickadees and White-breasted Nuthatches 
work on their foraging skills

FOY White-spotted Sawyer (large longhorned beetle) landed on me (my trunk must 
look dead or dying, or else it sensed every woodpecker in the place would love 
to eat it for lunch and I represented a safe haven)

Eurasian Collared-Doves nest-building

Mourning Dove gathering nest material

Great Blue Heron at nearby Sheldon Lake (at City Park) caught and immediately 
ate a nice 10" rainbow trout about 20 yards from two fishermen

American Crow took a big robin nestling from a nest and ate it (major protest 
from not only the parent robins but also grackles)

Cedar Waxwings eating almost-ripe mulberries

Red-winged Blackbirds finding moths (not Army Cutworms = the miller) down in 
fairly tall park grass

Two-tailed Swallowtail laid a light green egg on a darker green ash leaflet

Heard both American and Lesser Goldfinches singing (and a starling mimicking an 
American)

Fox Squirrels fornicating at the onset of Brood #2 for 2012

The rooster down the alley accepted my offering of a big black field cricket 
today (a couple days ago, for the first time ever, it refused, preferring 
instead some rough-looking corn on the cob provided by its owner.)

Total of 36 species, just 2 shy of the all-time high (conceivable misses today 
were Red-tailed Hawk, Common Nighthawk, Cooper's Hawk, and Black-billed Magpie)

Dave Leatherman
Fort Collins



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