Last night at approximately 7:30, I was sitting at a meeting/reception in the Belle Meade Room on the sixth floor of the Hampton Inn--Green Hills which is a glass enclosure overlooking the OLD Green Hills Library and the Regal Theater complex on the edge of the Green Hills Mall. An owl, which I believe to have been a great horned, flew languidly past the glass wall on the Regal Theater side of the building heading toward Hillsboro Road assumably on a hunting spree. It was coming from the direction of a Green Hills residential area where there are plenty of trees that might provide a home for an owl. It was exciting to see him as he flew alongside the building in the beam of one of the rooftop security lights to the safety of the dark beyond. This is the same room where I had crows imaging and pecking on the roof last month when I was there for a daytime meeting, and our speaker had to compete with the loud knocking of the crows beaks on the rooftop glass. Just a few moments ago, I went out on the deck to feed the juncos. I heard one of my bossy mocks raising a big fuss and looked over to see it chasing an immature red-shouldered hawk, a first for my property! It was flying fairly low over the yard, so I had a really good view as it flew from reasonably close proximity on over the rooftops across the street with "The Boss" on its tail all the way. I've seen red-shouldereds in Bell's Bend about a mile across the river from my house, but I've never seen one here before. With the scads of squirrels and multiple mice that come to eat my bird seed, it has found a fruitful hunting area, and I welcome it even if "Bossy Mock" isn't too pleased with its presence. Gradually, I am building up a pretty respectable list of birds for my neighborhood location. Last of all, yesterday, I had a "robin with an attitude." It seemed to have a gripe with one of the juncos that was feeding on the seed on the deck. The robin, who didn't want to eat the seed, repeatedly and fiercely chased that same junco off the deck away from the food. It appeared to be hate "robinified" that just would not be quelled until the junco was gone. After the attitudinal robin left, about twelve juncos came to feed hungrily on what I had provided for them. Dee Thompson Nashville, TN (near the old Cleece's Ferry Landing on the Cumberland in Charlotte Park) =================NOTES TO SUBSCRIBER===================== The TN-Bird Net requires you to sign your messages with first and last name, city (town) and state abbreviation. ----------------------------------------------------- ---------------------------------------------------- To post to this mailing list, simply send email to: tn-bird@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx ----------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, send email to: tn-bird-request@xxxxxxxxxxxxx with 'unsubscribe' in the Subject field. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * TN-Bird Net is owned by the Tennessee Ornithological Society Neither the society(TOS) nor its moderator(s) endorse the views or opinions expressed by the members of this discussion group. Moderator: Wallace Coffey, Bristol, TN wallace@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * Visit the Tennessee Ornithological Society web site at http://www.tnbirds.org * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * Topographical Maps located at http://topozone.com/find.asp * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * ========================================================