This afternoon I found a Nashville Warbler in the same tree with the
continuing Prothonotary Warbler and Northern Parula on the CU Boulder
campus. This is the fourth warbler species at this site in two days,
although nobody saw the Pine Warbler today to my knowledge.

The warblers have two favorite trees about 50 yards apart. One is a short
deciduous tree with yellowish leaves that grows out of a circle cut out of
the sidewalk just SW of Regent Hall (near the Lot 309 signs). The other is
a yellow-leaved oak a little farther north, along the NE side of Lot 310.
The birds started out in the first tree and then moved north into the pines
along Lot 310 just now.

The parula has been extremely regular for the past week -- it is almost
always in one of those two trees. The Prothonotary is much less regular --
I have only spotted it twice since it arrived. I don't know how long any of
these warblers will stay, or what will show up next, but I'm excited to
keep checking this spot in the coming days.

Nathan Pieplow
Boulder

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