So, I was at Grandview Cemetery in Fort Collins this morning and got a text 
from friend Georgia about Evening Grosbeak at Prospect Ponds Natural Area 
(PPNA) across town.  To chase or not chase, that's always the question.  Seeing 
an Evening Grosbeak anytime is cool, in the city is special and seeing any bird 
eating something is really special.  I finished up at the cemetery 
(Golden-crowned Kinglet and Eastern Screech-Owl were the only noteworthy birds) 
and went to PPNA.  I suspected the grosbeak was eating Russian-olives, a 
resource any birder who's paying attention knows is important to a lot of bird 
species.  I also thought there might be a chance of seeing the Rusty Blackbird 
at that site which is becoming a bit of a nemesis individual (I've gone down 
swinging with that darn bird at least 3 times).  The standard mathematical 
description I've thought of regarding chases is that only three things can 
happen: one of them is good and two of them are bad (you see the bird, you miss 
the bird, you miss the bird and somebody else sees the bird after you were 
there).  Expanding on this, when chasing two birds at the same location, there 
are six things that can happen and four of them are bad.  Well, I was thinking 
all four of the latter happened.  No Rusty Blackbird, no Evening Grosbeak, 
others have seen these birds today.  But, there have been other Patagonian-type 
discoveries because of the initial scrutiny of the general area where the 
mythical Rusty was first reported by John Shenot: altivagans Fox Sparrow, 
Harris's Sparrow, Winter Wren.  Today I met a nice birder named Michelle McKim 
who had seen the Evening Grosbeak, not the Rusty and who was hoping for Winter 
Wren for her personal Big Year.  We tried for the PPNA Winter Wren that had 
been in the deep woods north of the bike trail at the point where Lynn Hull's 
adobe & wood blind stands covered in orange plastic netting.  No Winter Wren.  
But right above where it was reported yesterday by John, we heard a strange 
agitation note.  We looked up and two birds were dogfighting their way thru the 
treetops in an obvious agonistic interaction of some sort.  One of them flew 
off, the other landed - a Northern Shrike with a deermouse.  Cool, a species, 
almost assuredly two of them, I had not yet seen this autumn, squabbling over 
an identifiable food item.  The score was squaring up a bit.  Walking back to 
our cars, Michelle indicated Eastern Screech-Owl was another species she was 
hoping for yet this year.  We went to the cemetery, where the owl sat serenely 
in the setting sun.  We also ran into friend David Wade.  Then we saw a fellow 
with a big camera walking about the general area of the owl.  Turns out he is 
Anton Morrison, caretaker for the owls and raptors at the Denver Zoo.  Daily, 
behind the scenes, he nurtures a one-eyed Western Screech-Owl, but had never 
seen a wild screech-owl.  Dave and I showed it to him.  Anton was truly, to his 
marrow, thrilled.


Driving home, I reconsidered this chasing business.  Misses on target birds: 2. 
 Target birds seen by others before, during or after I was there: 2.  New 
friends: 2.  Target bird found for new friends: 2. Text from old friend: 1. Old 
friend seen: 1. Unexpected birds: 2.  Food item: 1.  Today's "new math" chasing 
box score: bad 4, good 9.  I will always value "discovery" above "successful 
chase" but certainly good things can happen during a so-called "unsuccessful" 
chase.  I suspect most of you know this already.  I do, too, but forget from 
time to time.  Thankfully, humans, birds and a mouse helped me remember.  There 
ought to be a holiday for this sort of stuff.


Dave Leatherman

Fort Collins

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Colorado Birds" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To post to this group, send email to [email protected].
To view this discussion on the web visit 
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/cobirds/CY4PR0601MB3603D196122AD75A2E23A5D5C1DA0%40CY4PR0601MB3603.namprd06.prod.outlook.com.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to