Yesterday afternoon, while I was working in my office, I watched two Blue 
Jays continually cache -- and occasionally eat -- peanuts in my yard. 
Twice, the entire routine was in view. A jay would nab a peanut (in the 
shell) from my neighbor's feeder, fly over to my yard with it, duck its 
head into a small plant (a clump of grass, a very small conifer), and come 
back out empty. Then it would pick up some mulch or dirt and "cover" the 
peanut. Afterward, one of the jays displaced a Spotted Towhee, who was 
washing in my bird bath, to take a drink. The towhee returned when the jay 
got its fill. 

When the jays were done, I went out and inspected their handiwork, finding 
those two peanuts with some of my landscaping material partially disguising 
them. Between the jays, the towhees who kick the mulch, and my dog who 
buries it, it's a miracle anything in the yard remains where it belongs. 

This morning, one of the jays returned and gathered a peanut from a hiding 
spot that I hadn't noticed. 

Over the past several days, a Brewer's Sparrow has hung around the yard. 
This weekend, there were at least two, but I've only seen one this week. 
I've had two Western Tanager sightings, though they haven't stayed long. 
Yesterday, around midday, the neighborhood Spotted Towhees, House Wrens, 
and Black-capped Chickadees all decided it was time to show off. Several of 
each started singing. One male towhee found a conspicuous spot on a power 
line in the corner of my yard, fanned its tail, and strutted. A female 
Spotted Towhee has been out and about, too; she and her presumed partner 
have been visiting my feeders and yard fairly regularly. 

Elsewhere in Arapahoe Co...

On Monday, there was a small flock of Pine Siskins at deKoevend Park. A 
Western Scrub Jay was in a neighborhood just beyond the park. Yellow 
Warblers and House Wrens were singing along the trail. And a Clay-colored 
Sparrow traveled with a flock of Chipping Sparrow in the open spaces at the 
park.

Today, at Marjorie Perry Nature Preserve, were many Yellow-rumped Warblers, 
several Yellows, and a few Common Yellowthroats. There was also a Bank 
Swallow and at least two Cliff Swallows with the many Tree Swallows and 
Northern Rough-winged Swallows. A Western Wood-Pewee has taken the place of 
the Eastern Phoebe at the easternmost lake. On the far eastern edge of the 
preserve has been an empid., which I think / am guessing is a Dusky 
Flycatcher, but I would welcome second opinions on my mediocre photograph. 
(It sounded enough like a Dusky to me and it looks medium-everything [tail, 
bill].) I quite like empids., even if I rarely know which one I'm looking 
at.

<https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/-bWMd-nSCr98/VzNt11jRzqI/AAAAAAAAK5E/cpekboR0Umkc0oG_FTQYXXRYAe2pbH3JQCLcB/s1600/DSC_0041%2BMarjorie%2BPerry%2BEmpid.jpg>


<https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/-GCrlB-TpH2Q/VzNt8KsUlVI/AAAAAAAAK5I/771Hn_1zDoM0isxvm2N904FBwYz_jO7LgCLcB/s1600/DSC_0046%2BMarjorie%2BPerry%2BEmpid.jpg>


Swainson's and Cooper's Hawks are everywhere around Centennial. 
Red-tails,by comparison, suddenly seem uncommon. Great Horned and Eastern 
Screech Owls are also out and about. 

- Jared Del Rosso
Centennial, CO

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