Jude and I saw the new Harry Potter movie Tuesday afternoon. Leaving the theater, on Xenia Avenue as it crosses I-394, we watched a Peregrine Falcon fly out from behind the Alliance office building on the north side of the highway. It twisted up and around, disappeared behind the building, then appeared again in company of a second falcon. The pair swooped and curled as we waited for a stop light to change. The birds twice came close enough to each other that they could have touched. Harry and his wand couldn't have given us a better show. The light changed, we turned onto the highway entry ramp, then watched as a third falcon joined the pair. Not much we could do on that ramp. I took Jude home, then drove back to the building. The Alliance building sits just west of the Colonnade building where falcons have nested for the past several years. We pass the building often, taking quick glances at the building as we pass. The Peregrines nested there again this year. We assume the birds we watched were those birds, at least one of them, then, a juvenile. On arrival I drove to the top level of the parking ramp there, parked, set my camera in my lap, and waited. After about 30 minutes two falcons played in the wind over the highway, something over 200 feet away. I took some photos, a stretch for my 200mm lens, even with a doubler. The birds were there for two or three minutes, then disappeared. Another wait of 30 minutes and I watched two falcons again twirl together, this time in front of the Colonnade building, even farther away. It was fun to watch them. I'd go back if I knew their flight schedule. I might anyway. Three Peregrines in one location is worth a trip and a wait.