This morning, I met Geoff Stacks at Dahlia Hollow Park in Cherry Hills 
Village (Arapahoe Co.) to bird the High Line Canal Trail. In January, the 
portion of the trail between the park and a small marsh proved birdy. It 
provided a Hermit Thrush, White-throated Sparrow, and Pygmy Nuthatches for 
the Denver (Urban) CBC. To others, but never me, it offered a Pine Warbler. 
Gregg Goodrich first spotted that bird on December 29 and Bez Bezuidenhout 
confirmed it with a good photo on the 31st. As far as I know (from eBird), 
the White-throated Sparrow and Pine Warbler were last seen on January 6. 
Presumably, the good people who've been maintaining a feeder in this area 
have been seeing both birds regularly, as, it turns out, these two birds 
are still around.


Geoff and I arrived around 7:30 and found the area overwhelming. Singing 
Spotted Towhees greeted us. We followed the sound of chipping Song Sparrows 
to two active juncos to the song of the White-throated Sparrow. The bird 
didn't quite have its full song down, but it's getting there. We struggled 
to actually see the bird -- which felt necessary, since it was a lifer for 
Geoff. The song went from brush in front of us to brush behind us. As it 
did, a large cottonwood behind the canal filled with Red-breasted 
Nuthatches, American Goldfinches, a Brown Creeper, and then, briefly, the 
Pine Warbler. I got a bad look and Geoff got some bad pictures. Neither of 
us was sure of what we saw and, as this was another lifer for Geoff and a 
state bird for me, we carried on looking for it.


As we did, the White-throated Sparrow showed, hopping up a small tree to 
find a perch to sing from. Geoff got his look. And then the Pine Warbler 
reappeared briefly, taking a perch in the open before diving into brush. 
Another brief and unsatisfying look. We spotted the two juncos there, but 
lost the warbler. Off scene, a flicker and White-breasted Nuthatch called. 
I thought I heard a Cooper's Hawk too.


We'd eventually get a good look at the warbler, which took a perch over the 
canal for 30 seconds or so before disappearing again. Satisfied, we walked 
down to the marsh to look for the Hermit Thrush. There, it was calling and 
invisible. But flying from one end of the marsh to the other and taking a 
good perch itself, the thrush led us to two active Mountain Chickadees and 
a flock of a dozen or so Bushtits. 


We spent about an hour around the canal. Our list tallied 15 or so species 
of birds, but it felt like twice that.

>From there, we headed to Blackmer Lake. There was a flock of Cackling near 
the entrance – the smallest of these geese that I’ve seen. Nothing too 
notable around the lake, though we did hear a scrub jay. These birds have 
been at nearly every hotspot in the Centennial / Greenwood Village area 
this winter.

That was it. Back home, I briefly saw the Lincoln’s Sparrow that arrived 
yesterday. Later, my wife and I took our dogs for a walk through deKoevend 
Park to the Streets of Southglenn Shopping Center. At the park, a Brown 
Creeper has been a regular in small pines near the ice arena footbridge. At 
Southglenn, a pair of ravens continues work on a nest. 

- Jared Del Rosso
Centennial, CO

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