Over the past few days, my short list of birds that I’ve seen at Chapel 
Hill Memorial Gardens (Arapahoe) has grown by five. The cemetery is east of 
deKoevend Park in Centennial, across University and south of E. Caley Ave. 
It’s has an interesting mix of trees, albeit relatively small and sparsely 
planted ones. There are few bushes, though a line of them on the western 
border separates the cemetery from private residences. 

 

As for those new five birds…

 

On Thursday evening (8/7), while driving to Marjorie Perry Nature Preserve, 
I spotted a Common Nighthawk (#52 for me there) flying over the cemetery. 
There were also two dozen or so magpies & three dozen or so crows at the 
cemetery. This time of year, crows seem to use the cemetery as a staging 
ground. It’s something to behold, as you can sometimes get a hundred or so 
of them among the gravestones.

 

On Friday morning, I took my dog for a walk at Chapel Hill. Along the 
western border of the cemetery was a Western Wood-Pewee (#53) and a 
Wilson’s Warbler (#54). On the southeastern edge, the cemetery gives way 
into an undeveloped dirt and weed field. There’s a cluster of what I think 
are tumble pigweed growing on top of a large dirt pile. Often, the local 
coyotes are up among those weeds, but my dog and I risked it to look for 
sparrows. And we did find sparrows, but they flushed out of the weeds into 
private residences. I caught sight of one Vesper (#55) and, when the birds 
returned, Chipping. Back in the cemetery, I found a Townsend’s Warbler 
(#56), which offered some good looks before flying away. 

 

Elsewhere in west Arapahoe County…

 

This morning (8/9), I had a brief & noisy visit from a scrub jay.

 

Great Horns are very active & visible. On Thursday evening, I stopped to 
photograph one on a low perch, across a field, at Marjorie Perry preserve. 
As I did this, my dog started pulling on his leash. I checked him and his 
tail was curled under, in the terror that he usually reserves for 
encounters with coyote. I looked around to find, instead, a second Great 
Horn perched about 7 feet up and 7 feet away from us. It had moved in 
silently. I warily greeted it and it flew off, seeming to drop something 
when it left. (Moments earlier, I’d heard the rustling of something small 
in the brush near us. Perhaps the Great Horn got whatever that was.) That 
night, I woke to one calling in my neighborhood around 1:30 AM. And this 
morning, my wife and I encountered one screeching from a low & close perch 
along the Dry Creek Trail in Centennial. 


- Jared Del Rosso

Centennial, CO

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