I've grown Rocky Mountain Bee Plant (Cleome serrulata) for several years in 
the backyard of my Centennial home. The species spreads more than I'd like 
and the foliage has earned in the name skunkweed. But I appreciate it for 
attracting all kinds of pollinators, hummingbirds included and, one summer, 
a tarantula hawk.

I've never noticed songbirds feeding on its seeds. I figured it was because 
the seeds tend to fall -- they're in pods, which split open as they dry, 
and between my dogs and me, we're constantly brushing up against the plants 
and rattling seeds loose. (I've also probably not watched carefully 
enough.) But this year, they're being visited by House Finches, who appear 
to be feeding at the seed heads. Junco forage below them -- but there's all 
kinds of stuff on the ground, so who knows what they're eating. 

The House Finches also seem happy to remain perched in the most robust of 
the bee plants, some of which cleared 6 feet this year with all the 
moisture, and enjoy the sun.

- Jared Del Rosso
Centennial, CO

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