Happy Friday everyone,

I want to provide some information about Mississippi Kites in El Paso 
County.

I guess you could say that this bird is my 'spark' bird.  In 2011, I 
noticed some birds nesting across the street from my house that I'd never 
seen before.  Lovely, graceful birds and rather vocal - I'd often hear them 
before seeing them - including the young.  I somehow came across a local 
birder's blog - I'm not sure but it may have been SeEtta 
Moss's http://birdsandnature.blogspot.com/ and sent a message asking for 
help with bird ID and learned the name of these birds and that they were 
apparently pretty unusual for El Paso County - possibly breeding in the 
county for the first time or nearly so.  Having them nesting so close, it 
was a treat to observe their behavior and watch two birds successfully 
fledge that year.

They've returned every year since.  They typically arrive the first weekend 
in May - sometimes the second.  They typically stay until shortly after 
Labor Day.  Each year they seem to come back with more Kites with them.  I 
went to the CFO Convention this past weekend and when I got home on Monday 
the first sound I heard when I opened my car door was Mississippi Kite.   
We saw some in during the convention and seeing other people's excitement 
reminded me of how much I love these birds, how wonderful they are to 
observe, and how many Colorado birders still do not commonly get to see 
them.

Sometimes the first year juveniles seem to return with parents and help 
them, but I don't think this is an absolute.  One egg seems to be more 
common than two, and it happens fairly often that they are not successful 
in having the young survive all the way to fall migration. They do face 
some hazards aside from weather - one year I saw one adult taken by a 
Golden Eagle down near Adams Open Space - with two or three other Kites 
chasing the Eagle to try to save their comrade or family member.  They do 
not seem to be bothered much by people and seem to love suburbia - they 
tend to perch in the dead scraggly parts of old cottonwoods or elms or nest 
in little crooks in leafy parts of such trees. 

Their nests do not seem to be very remarkable or well-structured - often 
from the ground the nest itself is hardly visible.  They are easiest to 
observe at dawn or dusk - this is when they can often be found perched in 
the open on one of the dead scrags.  During the day they are more likely to 
be found loosely circling overhead somewhere, hunting for and eating 
insects in the air - although they will occasionally eat lizards and small 
birds, too.  They can perform quick dives with wings folded-in that can 
look pretty spectacular.  One of the most amazing sights is one I have so 
far observed primarily in late August - large groups (teens to 30s so far) 
of Kites at higher-than-typical altitudes overhead - more like swift height 
- apparently engaging in mass-feeding but perhaps sending a message that 
the babies are about to fledge and it is about time for all of us to head 
back to South America - i.e. hurry up, let's go!  But that could be my 
imagination. :)  They do have tendency toward colonies - they like to hang 
out and breed in the same general vicinity with one another.  So if you see 
one, chances are others are around, especially if they've been in the area 
for multiple years.

In the Security/Widefield Fountain areas I regularly see Kites around 
Watson Junior High, Widefield High School/Ross shopping center 
neighborhood, and down at Adams Open Space, personally.  Although I don't 
see reports in e-bird, I am aware that some have been seen in recent years 
in Colorado Springs, too - for example, at Patty Jewett Golf Course.  So 
far they do not seem to have nested across highway 85/87 in the Fountain 
Creek Regional Park, Venetucci or Pinello to my knowledge - although they 
can occasionally be seen in those places - hoping someone will see them at 
Saturday's Spring Count at Fountain Creek Regional Park.  Although it is a 
little early to tell, this year it looks like there may be two nesting 
pairs within two houses from each other on my street and possibly several 
others - maybe a dozen or so - within a half mile circle.  I can only 
estimate because I try not to be creepy to my neighbors by pinning down 
numbers and nesting sites precisely, peering into backyards all over the 
neighborhood and honestly I work a lot of hours and just make note of what 
I see and hear as I drive to work or am out and about in my neighborhood.

If you don't mind a few "off-topic" pictures in the mix, I have some photos 
and notes of the Kites in my area here, based on searching "Kite" on my 
blog: http://masooma.blogspot.com/search?q=Kite

Diana Beatty
El Paso County

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