The Denver Post

A rare bird is turning up all over Denver

- By Jonathan Shikes jshikes@denverpost.com

Birdwatche­rs walking along the High Line Canal during an annual bird count last Christmas got a surprise gift when one of them spotted a Bohemian waxwing among the juncos and blue jays.

The beautiful bird, so named because of the bright red and yellow waxy secretions that decorate the tips of their wings, was embedded with a flock of its cousins, cedar waxwings, which are much more common in Colorado. It was the first time in 35 years that a Bohemian waxwing had been recorded along the canal during the Christmas count, according to the volunteer birders.

Since then, birdwatche­rs have looked up in amazement as groups of dozens or even a flock of a hundred or more have been spotted in neighborho­ods from east to west and north to south.

“They can be present around Denver in any given winter — and winter only — but they are not guaranteed to be here, and they are very famous for being inconsiste­nt,” said Sam Wilber, the programs coordinato­r for the nonprofit High Line Canal Conservanc­y. “You never know where or when, and when they do show up, it’s always a surprise.”

Both kinds of waxwings eat insects during the summer and then switch to berries in the winter, but since there aren’t that many trees or bushes that produce berries in the winter, waxwings have to be selective, Wilber said. When food is short in their normal hunting grounds further north, Bohemian waxwings will go south into Colorado, where they dine on juniper berries, buckthorn and Russian olive, methodical­ly moving from berry patch to berry patch.

The last time a sizable flock of Bohemian Waxwings, which breed in Canada, Alaska and the far north of Europe and Asia, was spotted in Colorado was in 2013, according to birder and conservanc­y volunteer, Jared Del Rosso, who provided the organizati­on with informatio­n.

The best way to figure out where they’ve been seen is to sign up for alerts on the website ebird.com, which send automatica­lly generated emails about unusual sightings.

On Saturday, Feb. 18, the High Line Canal Conservanc­y will welcome birders for the Great Backyard Bird Count, an annual global community science initiative. This free event will start at 9 a.m. from the conservanc­y headquarte­rs, at 4010 E Orchard Road, in Centennial. Interested birders can learn about bird identifica­tion. Get more informatio­n at highlineca­nal.org.

 ?? HELEN H. RICHARDSON — THE DENVER POST ?? A Bohemian Waxwing sits on a branch early in the morning along the High Line Canal in Cherry Hills Village on Feb. 1.
HELEN H. RICHARDSON — THE DENVER POST A Bohemian Waxwing sits on a branch early in the morning along the High Line Canal in Cherry Hills Village on Feb. 1.

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