This morning, I took a short walk along the High Line Canal in Centennial 
and Greenwood Village (Arapahoe County). A vocalizing Broad-winged Hawk, 
chased off every perch by Black-billed Magpies and Blues Jays, was a happy 
encounter for me, though I suspect the hawk would have preferred the 
corvids leave it alone. (I've only previously seen Broad-winged Hawks fly 
over in Colorado.) The hawk was moving along the canal and surrounding 
neighborhoods, so I'm not sure it will continue at the trail. Also, I had 
first of season encounters with a Lazuli Bunting and Orange-crowned 
Warblers. The canal in this section intersects with a series of roads that 
all seem to have the same name, despite being non-continuous (Orchard...) 
-- or intersecting with the same road several times and in several places. 
So refer to my eBird checklist <https://ebird.org/checklist/S109001183> if 
you'd like more info on the location. 

I then went to Willow Spring Open Space to look at the beaver pond. I met a 
birder on my way down to the pond, so we looked together for the 
Yellow-throated Warbler, which continues in the pines at the Open Space's 
entrance. I've not had a good enough look at it to detect what might be 
drawing it to those pines -- nor have I yet seen a photo of the bird with 
insects. (But perhaps Dave Leatherman can hazard a guess? Aphids? Previous 
years, I've brushed up against the pines and been covered in them.)

The beaver pond at Willow Spring is relatively new. And for that reason, 
it's a marvel, a wonder, a miracle, and a gift, as it alters and enriches 
the open space. I saw one of the beavers amid it -- as well as a Canada 
Goose pair, a few mallards, and four Cinnamon Teals. I heard a Coot. If you 
look at the eBird list for Willow Spring Open Space, you'll see how many 
(relatively common) birds have appeared there over the last year -- small 
ducks, mainly, and Willets. We have beavers to thank for this -- as well as 
the tolerance of South Suburban Parks & Recreation and the people who 
manage the human-built dam (Englewood Dam) that frames the beaver dam. 

The pond was remarkably busy -- dozens of Yellow-rumped Warblers foraging 
over it (as well as in the weeds that are on the human-built dam), 
swallows, Red-winged Blackbirds, Common Grackles, and Black-billed Magpies. 
A Loggerhead Shrike was nearby, using some of the same perches a Northern 
Shrike did this winter. A Savannah Sparrow was in the marsh near the pond. 
Other birders reported a flock of 50+ Cedar Waxwing farther up the east 
side of the open space, feeding in junipers. Fairly substantial, at least 
by Centennial standards, flocks of sparrows can be found throughout the 
open space, but they particularly favor the two sides of Englewood Dam. 

I await the arrival of Common Nighthawks -- and hope that, perhaps, larger 
flocks of them might forage over the dam.

Finally -- human runners and walkers stopped to inquire about the warbler 
and share their own sightings (Say's Phoebes, goldfinches, and hawks). It 
was a wonderful bit of cross-pollination of interests, hobbies, and 
encounters with birds. 

- Jared Del Rosso
Centennial, CO

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