Wednesday last week (9/20), while walking my dog near Chapel Hill Memorial 
Gardens (Arapahoe Co.), I found a yellow-shafted flicker feather, likely 
from one of the intergrades I saw around my yard nearby in mid-August. The 
bird that likely dropped this feather seemed to be in a family of at least 
five; at least one member of that family -- though I was never sure if it 
was the same flicker as the one that had the yellow-underside -- had a red 
malar and also weak red feathering on its nape. Among that family, I only 
noticed one flicker with a yellow-underside, but I can't say I got a good 
look at all of them.


<https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/-vnCDpmGoaZo/WcnKAU6XmEI/AAAAAAAANq4/bR1TQTx92-ETTiRbuJeplXTnqup2sRnWgCLcBGAs/s1600/20170924_193207.jpg>

 

Later that on the 20th, I followed an unfamiliar call to find a House Wren 
scolding a cat in my neighbor’s yard, backed up by a squirrel. I rattled 
the chain link fence between us; my dog caught on, barked defensively, and 
the cat fled. 

 

On Friday (9/22), I heard, through my open kitchen window, a Great Horned 
Owl calling around 5:30 AM. After sunup, I spotted my first of fall 
Green-tailed Towhee and MacGillivray's Warbler in my yard.


On Saturday (9/23), I visited Marjorie Perry Nature Preserve (Greenwood 
Village) with a co-worker who took up birding in January. He added several 
lifers. Highlights included...good looks at Spotted Towhees, which were 
taking conspicuous perches and sort-of-singing. (I tracked one down that 
had a song I never heard. Sadly, my recording of this bird is 
undecipherable.) A first-of-the-fall Pied-billed Grebe was on the middle 
pond, and two Western Tanagers were in the trees around the water. The 
highlight, though, was a heap of sparrows moving from perch to perch among 
cattails. Chipping, Song, Lincoln's (lifer for him, FOS for me), and 
White-crowned Sparrows (another lifer for him, FOS for me) picked a single, 
downed branch to stand around, giving us an opportunity to get good looks 
at all. He especially liked the black-and-white-crowned White-crowned 
Sparrow, and I realized how difficult it is to describe a Lincoln's Sparrow 
as it hops around a branch, occasionally dodging an aggressive Song 
Sparrow. 


On Sunday morning (9/24), I briefly visited Willow Spring Open Space (back 
in Centennial). I had my first of fall Ruby-crowned Kinglet and 
Orange-crowned Warbler there; these were also my first of both birds at the 
open space. The two of them, a Wilson's Warbler, a Common Yellowthroat, and 
some chickadees were all near the beaver dam on the eastern side of the 
open space; all were agitated, chipping hard but still occasionally 
feeding, due to the presence of a preening Cooper's Hawk. A flock of around 
300 blackbirds, which flew into then out of the preserve, and a calling 
Virginia Rail were among the other highlights.


This morning (9/25), I had a White-crowned Sparrow in my yard. During a 
midday run at Chapel Hill Memorial Gardens, I encountered two scrub jays 
and a Western Meadowlark; both are new birds for me at the cemetery. I also 
noticed that the cemetery tore up the hill of pigweed, but Vesper Sparrows 
were still moving around the muddy field. One day, it'll probably all be 
grass. The meadowlark probably won't come back and maybe not the sparrows 
either, but perhaps they'll have excluded the mangy coyote who was always 
lounging around those weeds...


- Jared Del Rosso

Centennial, CO

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