On Sunday, Geoff Stacks and I birded a small section of the High Line Canal 
in Cherry Hills Village, between Dahlia Hollow Park and Colorado Blvd. None 
of last year's overwhelming flocks of robins or waxwings. But we did have a 
nice patch of Spotted Towhees, amid Buckthorn. I'll occasionally have 
visits from 6 or 7 Spotted Towhees around the chokecherry thicket and 
feeders in my yard. But I've rarely encountered that number in a single 
place on trails away from feeders. We counted at least 7 in one spot -- and 
several more around other parts of the trail. Very likely, there are 
feeders around the homes along the trail, helping to concentrate the 
towhees in certain areas. But, still: a lot of Towhees.

We also encountered a White-throated Sparrow with the towhee flocks. 
They're among my favorite winter birds in Centennial. I still recall, 
though less and less each year, the first time I heard a White-throated 
Sparrow song in northern Minnesota. Novice birder that I was, I had to work 
out if there was another person (unseen to me) somewhere whistling on the 
trail -- or if a bird could whistle that well.

- Jared Del Rosso
Centennial, CO

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