Date: 11/10/24 12:18 pm From: Jared Del Rosso <jared.delrosso...> Subject: [cobirds] Suburban food sources - Arapahoe
On Saturday (11/09), I took a walk through my neighborhood in Centennial. (Lots of snow here...) Right away, I encountered a North Flicker feeding on the fruit of Thicket Creeper (Parthenocissus inserta), which grows prodigiously in a yard up the street from me. Magpies seem especially drawn to creeper fruit; this was my first time seeing any other species feeding at these creepers, though that's just a neighborhood bias. The fruit usually remains untouched until frost.
Today (11/10), another neighborhood walk yielded a small group of Cedar Waxwings feeding in a hackberry tree at a park. I didn't have binoculars. The birds were high and mostly obscured by leaves. I think there were several not-yet-adult-plumaged birds among them. They seemed to be flycatching and gleaning insects in the tree. I didn't see them with hackberry drupes, but I did see them with insects. I thought one had a worm-like larvae at one point, but I can't be sure. I briefly saw an insect flying amid the hackberry leaves.
Otherwise, lots of Spotted Towhees and Dark-eyed Juncos visiting my yard, enjoying bird seed.
- Jared Del Rosso Centennial, CO
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