Keeping safe has kept my April count to a flyover Turkey Vulture. Until I 
started looking around my yard west of Larkspur in Douglas County, 7000', 
Ponderosa Pine / Gambel Oak. 

My three-day count:
A striking male Eastern Bluebird landed close to me, mixing with Westerns. 
A Brown Creeper made it's occasional appearance among the Pygmy, 
Red-breasted, and White-breasted Nuthatches. Northern Flickers are doing 
that jungle-bird call and hammering at my stucco wall and roof vents, Hairy 
and Downy Woodpeckers behaving a bit better. Baby American Crows (seemingly 
early) are making a gosh-awful sound over my neighbor's deck. A few 
Bushtits, Black-capped Chickadees, and Spotted Towhees. Sounds include 
at-dawn American Robins, melodious House Finches, whining Pine Siskins, and 
Gray-headed 
Dark-eyed Juncos doing that low, rapid rattle call from fairly high up. And 
an out of place Say's Phoebe across the street calling incessantly from the 
top of a ponderosa pine.

 A single fly-by Broad-tailed Hummingbird pushed out the last Steller's 
Jays, Mountain Chickadees, Cassin's Finches, and Townsend's Solitaires, 
following the rest of their kind up into the foothills. I was down to one 
each three days ago (surprised the Steller's was still around), none 
yesterday or today.

I've got far more cones in the yard than ever, maybe five-fold. I typically 
see Red Crossbills 8 to 10 times over a whole year, flocking tree to tree 
for about a minute and then gone. This winter almost every day they've been 
coming through, lingering, sometimes several visits. Bill sizes are 
variable. I've learned what the aftermath of the cone looks like vs. Red 
Fox Squirrel foraging. They've also been on the ground a lot, feeding on 
weed seeds. Thanks to someone for noticing that there should be six types 
of crossbills, ID'd by vocalization. I'm stalled at two types in the yard 
so far, it's not easy, but hey...what else are we going to do while penned 
in at home?

Dan Stringer
Larkspur, CO

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