For the past three years, I've been monitoring three raptor nests on the 
corner of 75th and Nelson in west Longmont for the City of Longmont. There 
is a grove of birch and elm trees that has grown steadily thicker over the 
years as the property has been uninhabited. Great-horned Owls and Red-tail 
Hawks have nested in the trees. Just south of the grove is the Osprey 
platform that the city erected when the birds began building on our 
emergency siren four years ago. Those birds have taken a lot of dead 
branches from the trees in the grove to build their nest.

Because it's private property, all of my observations have been from the 
road. Last year, I found the owls with one young in the southern section of 
the grove, so this year, I've been scanning that section, looking for the 
owls, but no luck. Two days ago, as I came to the intersection of 75th and 
Nelson, I noticed a head sticking out of the Red-tail nest. Thinking it was 
pretty early for RTH to be sitting on eggs, so I grabbed my bincos and lo 
and behold, it's the mama GHO! She has take over the RTH nest!  The hawks 
are still hanging around, might peeved, I would imagine. I'm curious to see 
where that pair goes to build because they've occupied this nest for at 
least a decade.

You can see Mama Owl from 75th, just south of the corner, or directly 
across from her on the south side of Nelson (narrow shoulder, beware). The 
nest is easily visible, you can't miss it, but there are a lot of branches 
that can obscure your view of the bird, so I find Nelson to be my best 
vantage point.

Kat Bradley-Bennett
Longmont

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