There have been reliable clusters of Rock Wrens @ the Arsenal in recent
weeks, including in the boulder-filled drainage ditch by the little loop
drive around the staff parking behind the north side of the visitor center
(west of the ferret building and north of the fenced garden)  . . . .
Also, all along the length of the boulder-covered slope or dam that defines
the west/northwest shoreline of Lake Ladora.
Walk the path along that stretch and they almost seem to follow or fly
ahead of you among the rocks.
(Lots of sparrows there, too, including White-crowned, Vesper, Savannah,
Lincoln's. . . .)
I've seen at least 4-5  ROWRs in both those places my last three times out
there in late September-early October.

Individuals pop up elsewhere, too, including north of the headquarters
building (the newer building just up the road north of and beyond the
visitor center), between the north edge of its parking lot and the fence to
the bison meadows beyond.

Most unexpected sighting was one perched on a sign on the southwest corner
of the intersection of 64th Avenue (the main east--west road when first
entering the Arsenal) and Havana Street (the road that runs north to Lakes
Mary/Ladora and Rattlesnake Hill).

Patrick O'Driscoll
Denver


On Sun, Oct 4, 2020 at 8:00 AM Charlie Chase <[email protected]>
wrote:

> Not sure about the black and white bands you describe but everything else
> sounds pretty typical for Rock Wrens in general and the Rock Wrens I have
> been seeing at the Arsenal and Barr Lake recently.  We banded one a few
> days ago at Barr Lake that was working its way through downed cottonwood
> brush on the lake bottom, far far from a rock.  Last week I had a Rock Wren
> working the road edge near Lake Ladore and another prowling cottonwood bark
> on a trunk at the Arsenal.  They are moving through the area and showing up
> in lots of interesting places.  And yesterday, one was in my neighborhood
> in Denver digging bugs out of concrete cracks in the sidewalk.     Great
> fun out in Nature!!
>
> Charlie Chase
> Denver
>
>
>
>
> On Sun, Oct 4, 2020 at 6:57 AM J V Rudd <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>> Hi all,
>> Had a great day at RMA with a Lesser Yellowlegs & a Sage Thrasher being
>> added to my 2020 list. https://ebird.org/checklist/S74362841
>> However, there was a 3rd bird which stumped me. I initially thought it
>> was a Rock Wren given the long bill (too long for a Vireo), drab
>> cream-colored breast (no stripes like a Sage Thrasher), size (slightly
>> larger than the other Rock Wrens we saw), and eye stripe (very bold).
>> However, it wasn't anywhere near a rock.
>> We saw it twice, once on top of an outhouse building, and then on some
>> logs. It was foraging for insects and not making a sound. One interesting
>> behavior I had not seen before in Rock Wrens: it was bobbing up and down.
>> Not rocking, not tail flicking, it looked like it was doing deep knee
>> bends! I have never seen this.
>> Later on we saw two other Rock Wrens (on rocks this time) and the eye
>> stripe was less distinct and there was no bobbing. they also looked smaller
>> than the bird we saw.
>> One last identifying feature: the bird had black and white bands on the
>> underside of its tail.
>> Any help would be greatly appreciated.
>> Good birding,
>> Van Rudd
>> Louisville, CO
>>
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