I'm going to work backward through my evening of birding around my 
neighborhood in Centennial tonight.

Fairly deep into dusk, around 7:40 PM, I stepped outside and startled a 
hummingbird away from the agastaches (rupestris and cana) growing at my 
front steps. The bird stalled at some wilty, orange container plants, and I 
noticed what appeared to be a "crest" on the hummer. I went back in, nabbed 
my binoculars, and had really poor views of what appeared to be a molting 
or sickly hummer. It appeared to be missing feathers on its heads, giving 
it that crest appearance. And it appeared to be missing a number of tail 
feathers. There was a lot of white appearing in the tail, more than I'm 
used to seeing. But I think I was actually seeing the rump of the bird, not 
the tail, and I suspect the latter was mostly missing.

I couldn't get pictures of the bird, which retreated as I went back in to 
get my camera. 

Does anyone have experience seeing a hummingbird that looks like this (in 
general terms) at this time of year? My suspicion is that it is an ill 
bird, as molting would be a bad strategy (I think?) in September for one of 
our resident or migratory hummingbirds. Certainly, I've not seen a 
hummingbird look like this at this time of year. 

If it's here tomorrow, I'll try to get photos. My front is planted to 
attract hummingbirds -- lots of agastaches, penstemons, and figwort -- so 
hopefully that will help this bird, whatever it's situation, along.

Earlier, I walked to Chapel Hill Memorial Gardens, motivated by David 
Suddjian's report from Littleton Cemetery. Glad I went. I spent a half hour 
or so at the entrance, with sparrows, Bushtits, a Wilson's Warbler, a 
pewee, and one unidentified ground skulker (towhee probably, but who 
knows). 

Though I arrived at the cemetery motivated by David Suddjian, I tried to 
conjure Dave Leatherman while watching the Bushtit flock, attempting to 
understand their behavior by the available food. Occasionally, I'd see one 
acrobatically reach from a shrub down to the wilty stalks of prickly 
lettuce (or at least I think that's what they were), where it would explore 
the plants seedheads and stems. I decided to inspect the plants, not 
expecting to find anything. But there appeared to be aphids (or at least I 
think that's what they were) a-plenty on the plants. I couldn't get photos 
of the small, green insects with wings, and, unfortunately, my photos of 
the tiny white insects the flying ones left behind are a blurry mess. (Bad 
job at documentation today, huh?)

On the weedy hill in the back of the cemetery, two Loggerhead Shrikes (the 
bird David reported from Littleton Cemetery, which started this voyage). 
This is the first time I've seen multiple Loggerhead's in a local hotspot 
in the Littleton - Centennial - Greenwood Village area that I bird.

On my way out, my own motivation: Common Nighthawks, flying with purpose, 
over the cemetery. I counted six during my time there, including the last 
bird of the evening...until the hummer that started this post.

- Jared Del Rosso
Centennial, CO

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