I went out to the Dunn Forest purple martin colony for one final evening check last week. I didn’t see a single martin or even a violet-green swallow along Tampico Road or the clearcut where we had been observing them all summer. The dogs and I then headed up the hill on the 200 Road where I heard the familiar bubbling twitter of a purple martin. It was a juvenile that had probably fledged late and now was apparently the last swallow in the Forest this summer. There was a strong west breeze that this young swallow was already navigating expertly. She was gliding in an almost stationary position just above the Douglas-fir saplings. The fledgling was conserving her energy while winged termites and dragonflies were served to her on the wind. I watched her for 15 minutes while my dogs foraged on low-hanging blackberries and occasionally darted into the brush for warm-blooded prey (without success, fortunately).