Ron,
sounds like a rock wren to me. Send me your email address and I'll send you good pictures of both birds.
Bill
bill_ kosar@msn.com
On Saturday, August 11, 2012 8:10:06 PM UTC-6, ronbco wrote:
Pueblo Nature Center, along the Arkansas river, along the trail east of the Nature center....there is a hillside of 50 ft of crumbling limestone with a rock wall running along the top (old road or something)sage/scrub in general, but cottonwoods of course along the riverfirst spotted the bird on the hillside then it moved to the rock wall and moved along it a few timesgot a good look...but apparently not good enough for an idI think it was either a rock wren or sage thrasher.Plumage looked worn dirty white with faint buff streaks on throat, otherwise grey on wings & back, no yellow or brown.I thought I detected some white above the eye.Bill was fairly thin and a bit long.Build was quite slenderIt stopped on the wall, tilt head up like a meadowlark, and let out a brief call of perhaps just a couple notes.I did not notice any tail wagging like I would expect with a wren.Given location, habitat and behavior what is more likely?One would be a lifer, the other not.What do you think?TxRon BoltonBerthoud
On Saturday, August 11, 2012 8:10:06 PM UTC-6, ronbco wrote:
Pueblo Nature Center, along the Arkansas river, along the trail east of the Nature center....there is a hillside of 50 ft of crumbling limestone with a rock wall running along the top (old road or something)sage/scrub in general, but cottonwoods of course along the riverfirst spotted the bird on the hillside then it moved to the rock wall and moved along it a few timesgot a good look...but apparently not good enough for an idI think it was either a rock wren or sage thrasher.Plumage looked worn dirty white with faint buff streaks on throat, otherwise grey on wings & back, no yellow or brown.I thought I detected some white above the eye.Bill was fairly thin and a bit long.Build was quite slenderIt stopped on the wall, tilt head up like a meadowlark, and let out a brief call of perhaps just a couple notes.I did not notice any tail wagging like I would expect with a wren.Given location, habitat and behavior what is more likely?One would be a lifer, the other not.What do you think?TxRon BoltonBerthoud
On Saturday, August 11, 2012 8:10:06 PM UTC-6, ronbco wrote:
--Pueblo Nature Center, along the Arkansas river, along the trail east of the Nature center....there is a hillside of 50 ft of crumbling limestone with a rock wall running along the top (old road or something)sage/scrub in general, but cottonwoods of course along the riverfirst spotted the bird on the hillside then it moved to the rock wall and moved along it a few timesgot a good look...but apparently not good enough for an idI think it was either a rock wren or sage thrasher.Plumage looked worn dirty white with faint buff streaks on throat, otherwise grey on wings & back, no yellow or brown.I thought I detected some white above the eye.Bill was fairly thin and a bit long.Build was quite slenderIt stopped on the wall, tilt head up like a meadowlark, and let out a brief call of perhaps just a couple notes.I did not notice any tail wagging like I would expect with a wren.Given location, habitat and behavior what is more likely?One would be a lifer, the other not.What do you think?TxRon BoltonBerthoud
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