Dave, You have the most impressive posts. 

On Thursday, March 15, 2018 at 9:57:39 AM UTC-6, Dave Leatherman wrote:
>
> *Red-necked Grebe NOT present at 3:30pm*, apparently ending its 2-week 
> stay (Austin Hess reported it in the AM).  I wonder how many crayfish and 
> gizzard shad it ate since February 28th?  We were all hoping to see some 
> red feathers coming in.  Safe travels to one of those long-watched 
> individual birds we all experience that becomes a personal friend.
>
>
> *At Grandview Cemetery (late in the day visit):*
>
> Flyover Tree Swallow (FOY in CO for me), flying fairly high north to south.
>
>
> Flyover Turkey Vulture (FOY for me).  On the way home I drove thru the 
> neighborhood east of the cemetery where a summer roost traditionally sets 
> up and did not see any vultures.  Some of the big spruce they liked to use 
> have been cut down, presumably as a deterrence strategy by the homeowners 
> who had to live under them (unfortunate but understandable).
>
>
> Pygmy Nuthatches foraging on European elm scale nymphs in American elm 
> (certainly not a historical food for this mountain species).
>
>
> Pygmy Nuthatches foraging on hackberry gall-making psyllid adults emerged 
> from winter nooks in the bark (certainly not a historical food for this 
> mountain species, early for the psyllids to be out, although their 
> threshold of 60 degrees or so has been achieved earlier and I did see one 
> of the blistergall adults (smaller than the nipplegall makers) out and 
> about on a headstone under a hackberry tree in February).  This earlier and 
> earlier emergence is one of the consequences of climate change in that food 
> availability and migrant birds seeking them can get out of sync.  I suppose 
> it could be said the wintering bark gleaners benefit from early emergence 
> since psyllid adults are certainly easier to nitpick off the surface of 
> bark and other substrates than it would be to dig/probe them out.
>
>
> Brown Creepers foraging on the ground at base of hackberry, presumably on 
> emerged psyllids.
>
>
>
>
>
>
> Red-breasted Nuthatch on the ground drinking melt from the last remaining, 
> dirty pile of snow (created during road plowing) in the shade next to a 
> shrub.
>
>
>
>
>
>
> At one point, all three of our normal nuthatches species were in the same 
> northern hackberry.  Not sure I've ever seen all three in the same tree.
>
>
> Red-tailed Hawk building nest in spruce.
>
>
> Female Great Horned Owl on nest.
>
>
> Definite influx of robins of late.
>
>
> Songsters included House Finches (literal din), robins, flickers, juncos.
>
>
> Flock of 9 Cedar Waxwings appeared to go to roost for the night in a big, 
> dense, berry-laden juniper.
>
>
> American Goldfinches eating flower buds of American elm.
>
>
> Almost expected to hear a male Broad-tailed Hummingbird zoom by but did 
> not.  Last year the first one at Grandview was in very late March, earliest 
> ever in my experience.
>
>
> Dave Leatherman
>
> Fort Collins
>

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