This morning Urling and I walked the Cherry Creek trail, north from the North 
Pinery parking area. Before we started we guessed at the species total: I said 
nine, she said fifteen. Two hours later we returned to the car with 12 species 
-- and then four Rock Pigeons flew over to bump the list up to 13 species.

Two observations of note: we scanned a tree on the west side of the stream that 
had nice-looking raptor nest in it, and noticed a Red-tailed Hawk perched on 
the other side of the tree. Going back, an hour and a half later, we saw the 
hawk perched in the same place. Protecting the nest from Great Horned Owls 
perhaps?

Then we listened, for 25 minutes, to a singing Marsh Wren. When we walked by 
the singing post at 10:30, we heard nothing. Twenty-five minutes later, the 
wren had launched into full gear: it sang for 25 minutes straight before we 
started the trek back to the car. Just before that, Urling spotted another 
Marsh Wren a couple of hundred yards downstream and later she encountered one 
upstream a quarter of a mile or more. Meanwhile our singer chattered on and on. 
We stood within 10 feet of the bird and never had a glimpse -- not even any 
movement. 

Why would a Marsh Wren sing so incessantly in November? Do they set up winter 
territories? Do they simply feel jubilant? Did the singer want to exclude the 
other wrens from his bailiwick?



Hugh Kingery 
Franktown, CO

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