Went to Morrison today to see if I could find a singing dipper.  (Hwy 74 is 
closed, so I couldn't go up to Lair o'the Bear).
Found a dipper at the entrance to Morrison Park (right by the gauging 
structure).  He did a fair amount of "zeet"s and
once uttered the start of a song.  I was able to watch him for a very long 
time, since he hardly budged from the site.
He seemed extremely successful at finding food, since he brought up tiny 
black things every time he dived.  Even
though I was only 12' away with 8x42's, I couldn't tell if it was animal or 
vegetable, but I assume the former.  I finally 
walked on, and when I came back an hour later he was still at the same 
spot.  Possibly the way the ice was formed it
served as a trap for food being washed downstream?

On Tuesday, February 2, 2021 at 9:28:41 PM UTC-7 teu...@earthlink.net wrote:

> Interesting to read Jeff's report about dippers singing on the Big 
> Thompson river.
> Later this afternoon, as we were returning to the parking lot at South 
> Platte park, we watched the American Dipper that frequents the river under 
> the C470 bridge.  After watching it pick at insects and an old Starbucks 
> cup wrapper, the dipper started spontaneously singing it's beautiful song, 
> which raised our curiosity.  According to David Sibley's Guide to Bird Life 
> and Behavior, both sexes of Dippers sing all year long, with a peak early 
> in breeding season. Song establishes breeding territories in the spring, 
> and winter territories in the fall and winter.  Fun to know!
> Cheryl Teuton 
> Aurora 
>
>
>
> Sent from my Verizon, Samsung Galaxy smartphone
>
>

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