I saw the information for backyard birds earlier today.  Not to sound 
redundant, but after living in Louisville for 25 years, I built up quite 
the backyard bird list.  None as good as what others reported, but some 
strange stuff nonetheless.  I was about 2 blocks from Fireside Elementary 
School near Dahlia St.   The backyard had one unique advantage that other 
neighbors did not:   an eight foot high jungle of cedar bushes, with brush 
and thickets that covered 3/4 of the backyard.   Memorable notes:

-  Red eyed vireo - two years in a row, singing in spring
-  a pair of bushtits that nested in the thicket for two years - the 
surprise was that they were carrying unshelled sunflower bits back to the 
nest.  (I never thought that they would feed the juveniles seeds, but 
apparently they do.  
-  A raven and crow perched side by side;  once seen like that, you wonder 
how you could ever mix the two species up. 
-  An American kestrel, prying open the head of a house sparrow it caught. 
-  Numerous Cooper's hawk attacks - one of them learned how to drive doves 
and robins into the sliding glass door, and pick them up after they had 
severe concussions.  
-   Singing spotted towhees every spring. 
-   Singing and foraging green-tailed towhees, about every other spring. 
-  Singing hermit thrushes, about every other spring, usually on wet cold 
spring days
-  Myrtle warblers, Audubon's warblers, yellow warblers, orange crowned 
warblers, yellow warblers, almost every spring. 
- Red tailed hawks, great horned owls, and if you count fly-overs - bald 
eagles. 
-  Western tanagers, bullocks' orioles, black headed grosbeaks, and one 
time a singing male rose-breasted grosbeak. 
-  A male lazuli bunting gathering millet from the bird feeder.
-  American tree sparrows, white crowned sparrows, and a clay colored 
sparrow
-  All three jays:  Steller's, Blue, and Scrub (remember this is suburban 
Louisville)
-  Mountain chickadees, and red-breasted nuthatches in cold winters. 
-  And dozens of other species - I'm too lazy to look through the whole 
database. 
-  And one of the most memorable - a male mallard.   Not unusual you might 
think, but the whole yard was sealed off by high fences, with tall bushes 
and trees.  He popped in one morning, took a look at me, and flew to the 
neighbors yard.  

All that along with the raccoons, squirrels, skunk, mice, rats, 
cottontails, and the crowning glory - a red fox family taking up residence 
in the cedar thicket - one morning the entire backyard had rubber balls, 
tennis balls, a child's sock, a tennis shoe, doggie-squeeze toys, an entire 
wing from a mourning dove, and other paraphernalia that the adult foxes had 
dragged into the backyard overnight for the kits to play with.  They must 
have canvassed the entire neighborhood overnight to do this!  

Happy backyard birding! 
John T (Tumasonis) Broomfield CO
"I'm not a real birder.  I only pretend to be one on COBirds."   

-- 
-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Colorado Birds" group.
To post to this group, send email to cobirds@googlegroups.com
For more options, visit this group at
http://groups.google.com/group/cobirds
* All posts should be signed with the poster's full name and city. Include bird 
species and location in the subject line when appropriate.
* Join Colorado Field Ornithologists https://cobirds.org/membership/
--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Colorado Birds" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to cobirds+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com.
To view this discussion on the web visit 
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/cobirds/1d5c15e7-eec6-422a-b5cd-9b50cdc87460n%40googlegroups.com.

Reply via email to