This evening (8/17), I visited Marjorie Perry Nature Preserve in Greenwood 
Village (Arapahoe) for a short walk. During the hour before sunset and 
through dusk, I picked up my first mosquito bites & Lark Sparrows at the 
preserve. The mosquitoes were everywhere; the sparrows (two) were walking 
with me up and down the dirt path near the ponds. 

Also of note...along the path that cuts between the two main ponds were a 
few Black-capped Chickadees and Lesser Goldfinches. An adult male Yellow 
Warbler, singing some sort of Yellow Warblerish song, was there too. Two 
Western Kingbirds and a Western Wood Pewee were also near the ponds. (This 
is the first I've seen of the kingbirds near the water at the preserve. 
Usually, they're in the fields.) On the pond was a cormorant, a kingfisher, 
a few Black-crowned Night Herons, and mallards.

I stayed through dusk, hoping to hear some marsh birds (nope) or spot a 
nighthawk (nope). But I did get to hear two calling Great Horns. And on the 
way out, a third flew low over the path that leads away from the preserve 
and into the surrounding community, making a brief, harsh screech as it 
went. It perched near the High Line Canal Trail and kept repeating the 
call. 

Which brings me to the fly-catching nuthatch. I saw it on the same path as 
the owl, but earlier, on my way into the preserve. Near a section of trail 
flanked by small conifers, a Red-breasted Nuthatch was "sallying" from one 
side of the trail to another, perching on the wooden fence posts as it 
went. I've never seen nuthatches do this, so it took me a moment to 
establish that the small, dark flycatcher wasn't some unexpected bird but a 
common enough bird doing something uncommon. For its effort, the nuthatch 
gained a small moth, which it picked out of the air before flying back into 
the trees. 

Elsewhere in west Arapahoe Co....I had Black-chinned and Calliope 
hummingbirds (one each) in my yard today. At one point, those two and a 
third (unidentified) coexisted, perched in a tree near each other. That 
changed, of course, as soon as I grabbed my camera. I also saw, albeit 
poorly, the flicker, which I noted in an earlier post, that seems to have a 
very yellow underside. 

- Jared Del Rosso
Centennial, CO

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