I spent the morning watching a Northern Shrike at Willow Spring Open Space 
in Centennial. The effort culminated, after about two hours of watching, 
with getting to see it successfully hunt one small rodent, from a low 
perch, in a grassy weedy field. The shrike's effort was pure patience and 
skill, with the shrike waiting several minutes on its perch, inspecting the 
grassy field around it, waiting out a Red-tailed Hawk pair that floated low 
circles near it, then dropping straight down to fetch the rodent. The 
shrike then flew its catch into the willows surrounding the marsh at Willow 
Spring Open Space, disappearing.

Along the way, I watched the shrike preen, brief interludes as it 
continually scanned the marsh and surrounding fields for food. 

I watched it, too, surrender its perch to a kestrel. I think the shrike 
called as it flew off. The kestrel, meanwhile, didn't stay long. It flew 
directly over me, hovered over the field behind me, then went hunting 
elsewhere. 

During my time watching the shrike, it frequently disappeared from its 
conspicuous perches into grasses and willows. But I could not, with that 
one exception of the rodent catch, see what it did with those efforts. It 
preferred to stay low, particularly in the willows, after hunting.

Also at the open space was an adult male Northern Harrier, somewhat 
uncommon for the portion of Centennial that I bird regularly. It made a few 
passes over the marsh and, at one point, appeared to be eating something it 
had caught. My observations were distant and obscured by cattails, though. 

Also of note: a half dozen or more American Tree Sparrows; a low, drifting, 
croaking-as-it-went Common Raven; and an American Crow, harassing in 
flight, one of the members of the Red-tailed Hawk pair. That pair put on a 
show, too, flying together, hovering in the warm winds, and making passes 
at prey in the grasses. 

 - Jared Del Rosso
Centennial, CO

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