About 4:30 pm today I saw a beautiful adult male No. Parula Warbler on a
dead limb in a small tree across from the second large cottonwood tree as
you walk up Towhee Trail.  This trail takes off of the Mesa Trail about 50
yds north of the parking lot for the So. end of the Mesa Trail.  This
parking lot is accessed from Marshall Rd. (hwy. 170), which crosses hwy. 93
a few miles to the east.  I was actually looking for a Wilson's Warbler
that I heard chipping in the bushes below when, all of a sudden, the Parula
flew up and sat out in the open long enough for me to easily identify it!

Other migrants included many White-crowned Sparrows (most already hidden in
bushes for the night), Yellow-rumped Warblers (100+), a few Mtn. Bluebirds,
and two Wilson's Warblers.  Hundreds of robins were eating juniper berries.
 Townsend's Solitaire's (many) were even defending their bushes and
territories against Yellow-rumped Warblers.

Paula Hansley
Louisville

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