They hang out in my hen house along with various other sparrows and finches. 
There is a gap above the door which allows them to come and go. Between the 
heat from the hens and the heat lamp, which I have going right now, they are 
nice and warm. I haven't seen them eating the chicken feed, but they are 
swarming my feeders right now. They have learned that there isn't much seed on 
the ground from the feeders right now.

I watched one yesterday, figure out how to get to the seed in the feeders. It 
stood around the deck railing, then made several attempts to land on the 
feeder's perch, missing it a few times, then finally making it. Now, I have 
five or six constantly eating from the thistle seed feeder, and a couple others 
from the regular feeder. The only other visitors right now are the Chickadees. 
I think that the house finches are content to stay in the warm hen house and 
eat the chicken feed.
________________________________
From: cobirds@googlegroups.com <cobirds@googlegroups.com> on behalf of Jared 
Del Rosso <jared.delro...@gmail.com>
Sent: Monday, January 15, 2024 8:39 AM
To: Colorado Birds <cobirds@googlegroups.com>
Subject: [cobirds] Where do Dark-eyed Juncos spend cold nights (Arapahoe)?

I'm pretty sure at least one Dark-eyed Junco spends the night within the frame 
of an outdoor lounge-type chair. It (the frame) has a large opening, out of 
which a junco has emerged the last two mornings. There's a perch-like rod that 
runs horizontally across the frame. There are bird droppings within the frame's 
empty space.

I also think juncos may be overnighting beneath my shed. I see junco-like 
footprints and bird droppings on the landscapes bricks that I placed around the 
edge of the shed, my lazy attempt to discourage raccoons and foxes from 
accessing the space beneath the shed, which has about 8 inches of space beneath 
it.

I've not yet noticed juncos within my (now empty) chicken coop. I'll keep an 
eye on that.

My yard is edged with a thicket of Nannyberry (Viburnum lentago) and 
chokecherries. There are other random, non-native landscaping plants mixed in. 
There's also a juniper, which has reseeded and created several small junipers. 
I've added some downed branches and the corpse of a few, small Christmas trees 
to the mix. The towhees seem to like staying within the mess of all of that. 
Seems like some juncos prefer more manufactured spaces.

- Jared Del Rosso
Centennial, CO


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