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Urling & I just watched a Peregrine Falcon flap across the field below our house and land in the scrub oak patch that holds our bird feeders. It stayed there maybe 5 minutes and then flew on north. We saw it while walking in the field (probably would have missed it otherwise) so we didn't see how the feeder birds reacted. When I got back to the house, the feeders had no customers, though I could hear a White-breasted Nuthatch making its "pity pity pity" call.
Our feeders have lots of
customers -- during the really cold days juncos topped at 66, with other
top counts of 11 Am. Tree Sparrows and 11 Spotted Towhees, 41
Red-winged Blackbirds (they don't seem to stay very long), and 1-5 of
most other common species. About every other night Urling hears a N.
Saw-whet Owl calling but when I go out it shuts up; I have heard it two
nights only.
Other raptors include one or two regular Red-tailed
Hawks, a Rough-legged Hawk (usually near Willow Lake Drive &
Castlewood Canyon Road) that we haven't seen now for 2 weeks, and
occasional Northern Harrier, Sharp-shinned, and Cooper's Hawks.
We've
monitored a Northern Mockingbird that has spent the winter, so far, in a
neighbor's yard which has lots of patches of Three-leafed Sumac (a/k/a
Skunkbush a/k/a Rhus trilobata. The sumac has lots of "griggles" --
i.e., dried berries that the mockingbird seems to like -- as do a couple
of Townsend's Solitaires.
In the mockingbird's territory Urling
spotted 3 Eastern Bluebirds Jan. 25, but they didn't stick around. I
need to get a camera.
Hugh Kingery
Franktown, CO
* Griggles: small apples left on a tree. I think we can apply it to the sumac berries too.
Source: Robert Macfarlane, quoted in High Country News. His book offers some other useful terms for bird habitat:
cowbelly: the fine mud that collects on the edges of slow-moving streams;
daddock: dead wood;
spronky: having many roots.
And he laments that the Oxford Junior dictionary deleted willow, acorn, & buttercup.