The evening of July 7 brought a big thunderstorm with some intense winds.
The road to the Plum Creek Nature Area passes between some tall cottonwoods
before it ends at a washout. As I drove to those trees soon after sunrise
on July 8 I noticed about 50-60 birds feeding on the asphalt and adjacent
dirt edge. There were leaves and twigs blown down on the road, and I
figured some invertebrates must have blown down from the trees in the
storm; the rest of the roadway had no feeding birds. I was delighted to see
the diversity of species feeding very intently on the road surface, and
then humbled to be unbale to determine what they were so busily eating. The
asphalt assemblage included Western Kingbird, Eastern Kingbird, House Wren,
American Robin, Gray Catbird, European Starling, Yellow Warbler, Lark
Sparrow, Blue Grosbeak, Red-winged Blackbird, Brown-headed Cowbird, and
Bullock's Oriole! Starlings, blackbirds and cowbirds were most abundant,
but I was surprised to see so many species that would not usually visit a
road surface to forage. The pair of catbirds out in the open road was most
striking. So I closely examined the road and dirt edge, but all I could
find were 3 or 4 termites. Even when I scrutinized the exact areas where
birds were busy feeding moments before I couldn't find anything!

Later along the road to the horse corrals I came upon a mob of magpies
crowded into a willow and raising a ruckus like only corvids can. Several
were focusing attention near the base of the tree amid the grasses. Maybe
they were alarmed by a big snake. I walked in close and couldn't see the
target of their interest amid the dense willow foliage and grasses. I was
thinking, do I really want to get a close look at a rattlesnake? As I
closed in, out flushed an adult female Cooper's Hawk dragging a limp magpie
in her talons! It was the only quiet magpie in the bunch. She winged off
toward the reservoir with a train of outraged magpies on her tail.
Literally. As far as I could see she held her prize tight in her talons all
the way over.

David Suddjian
Littleton, CO

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