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[[circled page number]] 19

[[margin, in blue]] 46 [[/blue]] [[in red]] 24 [[/red]] [[/margin]] they are well launched, a single ^[[ blue check, red check]] White-bearded Flycatcher, flies up from a patch of vegetation some distance away and [[underline]]follows[[/underline]] the Whitestarts for 20 ft. When the Whitebeard gives up the chase and lands separately. [[underline]] Obviously [[/underline]] the Whitebeard has [[underline]]some[[/underline]] innate following and/or joining tendency. 
[[margin, in blue]] 51
53 [[/blue]] [[in purple]] VII
HO [/purple [[/margin]]   9:20 am. Fog coming in. See another mixed flock in patch of very dense, natural alpine scrub. Includes ^[[4 blue checkmarks]] 4 Blue & Blacks, ^[[blue checkmark]] 1 Yellow-belly, ^[[2 blue checkmarks]] 2 [[underline]]cyanocephala [[/underline]]. Birds flitting about top of scrub. Probably 10-20 ft above ground. Quiet, except for "CN"s. Yellow-belly follows and joins Blue & Blacks [[underline]]repeatedly [[/underline]]. [[underline]] cyanocephala[[/underline]] f [[arrow pointing to right]] Blue & Black at least once. 
[[margin, in red]] Albi [[/red]] [[in blue]] 54 [[/blue]] [[/margin]] When I first saw the flock, there was a [[underline]] [[checkmark]] [[male symbol]][[/underline]] Albi about 4-5 ft from the Blue & Blacks. (This is an area where I heard R's earlier). But he soon disappears. This would suggest that [[male symbol]] Albis also "escort" mixed flocks. 
   Going on uphill. 9:30. Sun out again, but more patches fog are coming up. 
[[margin, in red]] 28 [[/margin]]   As I go, I see the ^[[4 red checkmarks]] 4 Blue & Blacks of the mixed flock flying uphill. They are [[underline]] not [[/underline]] followed by anything else. 
   See single Sooty Thrush alone.
   Up by the TV Station again 9:50 am. Everything very quiet. Sun shining thru fog
[[margin, in red]] 29 [[/margin]]   See single [[underline]] ^[[red checkmark]] cyanocephala [[/underline]] alone.
   Leave 10:10 am.
   On the way down, see a single [[underline]] Buthraupis [[/underline]] fly across road. Certainly alone in flight. But there may be other birds in the trees in which it lands.
[[margin, in red]] Sitti [[/margin]]   COMMENT: What in the world do such species as the Sitt[[i]]