On January 1, a sharp-eyed participant in the urban Denver CBC spotted a 
Bohemian Waxwing amid a large flock of Cedars along the High Line Canal in 
Cherry Hills Village in Arapahoe County. (Apologies to that person -- I 
don't have a list of participants and so can't credit them.) This allowed 
all 15 of us participating in the count to get looks at the bird, a lifer 
for many on the trip.

I returned to the Canal in Cherry Hills Village today on a walking break. 
There are many, many waxwings feeding on buckthorn (and, no doubt, helping 
reseed it). I encountered a Bohemian among them, south of Quincy Ave, along 
the Canal near Blackmer Hall of Kent Denver School. 

I had only brief views of the Bohemian, before losing it among the brush 
and Cedars. Not only are waxwing moving along the canal, from spot to spot, 
they're also incredibly active wherever they stop. They work the ground 
(for water) to the canopy of cottonwoods (for sun and melting snow, it 
seems). So birders who hope to find the Bohemian would be well-served 
bringing either several other birders with them, the better to check all 
the waxwings, or packing all the patience and, better yet, dumb luck they 
can find.

I enjoyed watching the Cedar Waxwings drinking from melting snow, off 
cottonwood and pine branches. At one point, I saw one waxwing offer either 
food (amid the pines -- insects?) or water (in the form of melting snow) to 
another. It seems late for a parent to tend to young. It seems early for 
one of a pair to tend to the other. I skimmed *Birds of the World*, but 
didn't see anything about this sort of behavior in winter. (Admittedly, I 
didn't read the entry exhaustively.) Has anyone else noticed this? No 
pictures, as the birds were in the shadows of pines.

There is an incredible amount of buckthorn spread out along the Canal, but 
there do seem to be fewer drupes on the plants than on January 1. The whole 
portion of Canal -- from Colorado to the edge of Kent Denver -- is worth 
investigating. (Cassin's Finches have also been found on this portion of 
trail lately.) So too is the riparian line that emerges from the southern 
edge of Blackmer Lake. In years past, starlings, waxwings, robins, and 
sparrows (in impressive numbers) visited the buckthorn there. 

At home, in Centennial, a White-throated Sparrow continues in my yard. An 
American Tree Sparrow has also visited, along with two White-crowned 
Sparrows, several Spotted Towhees, and many juncos.

- Jared Del Rosso
Centennial, CO

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