Hello, birders.

Topiltzin Martinez and Hannah and Andrew and I birded around Boulder County 
this past Saturday, the summer solstice, June 21.

At Rabbit Mountain, we heard the distinctive "whit wheet!" call of a 
Curve-billed Thrasher:

https://soundcloud.com/ted-floyd/bird-2014-06-21-1711-colo-boul-ramo-x

I'm pretty sure it wasn't a thrasher. But mimetic and ventriloquistic 
Yellow-breasted Chats abound at the site... :-)

Over at the Fowler Trail, we head the "Drink Your Te-e-e-e-ea!" of an 
Eastern Towhee:

https://soundcloud.com/ted-floyd/09-rsto-2014-06-21-1038-colo-boul-fotr-x

But such songs aren't necessarily sung by Eastern Towhees.

At the nearby Mesa Trail trailhead, we heard this Preacher Bird, a.k.a. the 
Red-eyed Vireo, perhaps the same one reported earlier by way of Gary Lefko:

https://soundcloud.com/ted-floyd/10-revi-2014-06-21-0854-colo-boul-metr-x

And up at Walker Ranch, at daybreak, an Olive-sided Flycatcher urged, 
"Quick! Free Beer!" Here's the recording we got:

https://soundcloud.com/ted-floyd/08-osfl-2014-06-21-0609-colo-boul-wara-x

The rest of the story:

We birded from the beginning of astronomical dawn around 3:30 till sunset 
around 8:30, spending most of our time in and around the foothills. We 
didn't see our first collared-dove until mid-afternoon, and we missed Blue 
Jay altogether, so that gives you a bit of a feel for our tempo and 
trajectory. But we did see a few birds, among them Redheads and Ruddy 
Ducks, Bald and Golden eagles, Wilson's Snipes and a Wilson's Phalarope, 
one or two *Flammulated Owls* and a couple of Common Poorwills, at least 
four *Lewis's Woodpeckers,* a Prairie Falcon, the continuing *Black Phoebe* 
and an unusual *Cassin's Kingbird,* the aforementioned *Red-eyed Vireo* and 
*"Rufous-sided" 
Towhee,* a few Blue Grosbeaks and *Bobolinks,* and a Cassin's Finch and a 
Red Crossbill.

A bit more detail:

Long Canyon during astronomical and nautical dawn. The Flamm or Flamms 
(hard to tell, they're ventriloquistic, like chats) and poorwills. Also 
Common Nighthawk and night-singing Violet-green Swallows.

Walker Ranch around sunrise. Lots of Western Bluebirds and a few Mountain 
Bluebirds, a singing Cassin's Finch, a few Pine Siskins, and a Type 2 Red 
Crossbill flying over. Dawn chorus of Green-tailed Towhees, Plumbeous 
Vireos, Western Warbling-Vireos, Western Tanagers, Black-headed Grosbeaks, 
Cordilleran Flycatchers, Audubon's Warblers, Vesper Sparrows, and 
Olive-sided Flycatchers.

Gregory Canyon. Starting to quiet down in there, but we found a Prairie 
Falcon and a Canyon Wren, several Gray Catbirds, Virginia's and 
MacGillivray's warblers, Lazuli Buntings, and all three nuthatches.

Mesa Trail. We birded only around the trailhead, where we heard and saw the 
Red-eyed Vireo. Also a Golden Eagle. Lots of Cedar Waxwings here today, and 
at other places we visited. And lots of dogs, not a one of them, so far as 
we could determine, under "voice control," contra prolific and clearly 
indicated signage to the effect.

Fowler Trail. At least four Lewis's Woodpeckers. Also White-throated Swifts 
and the interesting "Rufous-sided" Towhee. Butterflies and beetles were 
excellent here.

Cherryvale Open Space. Savannah Sparrows galore and three singing 
Bobolinks. Also outrageously cooperative Wilson's Snipes and a male 
Wilson's Phalaropes in the wet grass; phalaropes were documented as 
breeders here a few years back.

Sombrero Marsh. Adult male Redheads with pale orangey heads; I wonder if 
they were beginning their molt to alternate, or "eclipse," plumage. Also, 
marsh birds that make strange sounds, among them strangulating 
Yellow-headed Blackbirds, a spooky Pied-billed Grebe, and red-and-black 
baby coots--I saw recently where someone said they look like little 
devils--making sweet peeping sounds.

Cottonwood Marsh. Just a brief visit, for the usual suspects. Pelicans and 
cormorants, the avocet families, a Western Grebe, Bank Swallows, an Eastern 
Kingbird, and a Bald Eagle.

Boulder Creek at 75th Street. Saw and digiscoped the Black Phoebe.

Gunbarrel Hill along Lookout Road. A Horned Lark or two and a Cassin's 
Kingbird, rare in Boulder County but not entirely unexpected here; several 
Cassin's Kingbirds were present in the general vicinity in 2013, so maybe 
this bird was a holdover from last year. Also, a changing-of-the-guard 
moment. Summer started at 8:51 in the morning, but we saw the first sign of 
"fall" "migration" at 2:54 p.m., a bright Bullock's Oriole out in the grass 
in the middle of nowhere. Bullock's Orioles begin to disperse by mid-June 
to their mid-summer molting grounds, and they're often seen out in arid 
grasslands and shrublands; they especially like yuccas and chollas, where 
they impersonate Scott's Orioles.

Lagerman Reservoir. Four Ruddy Ducks were a bit of a surprise. And we saw 
some intriguing bird behavior. An Osprey dived from a great height for a 
fish, then struggled mightily with it, at times being almost completely 
submerged; the Osprey gave up eventually, then barely managed to fly off, 
waterlogged, shedding water like a wet dog. Immediately, an American White 
Pelican flew over, landed where all the commotion had taken place, and 
scooped up the fish the Osprey couldn't wrangle. Probably the easiest meal 
all summer for that pelican.

Rabbit Mountain. We met up here with Marcel Such and Joel Such. Pretty 
slow, but we had a pleasant amble, with some Blue Grosbeaks and Lark 
Sparrows, a Townsend's Solitaire, and a Blue-gray Gnatcatcher.

Greenlee Preserve. We wound down the day here with swallows over the marsh, 
among them our only Tree Swallow of the whole day. So our last species of 
the day was a Tree Swallow in the genus *Tachycineta*, and our first bird 
of the day had been a Violet-green Swallow, also in the genus *Tachycineta*. 
*Tachycineta* is Greek for "moves fast," something we didn't do much of on 
this long, leisurely, and wonderful day of birding around Boulder County. 

Ted Floyd

Lafayette, Boulder County, Colorado

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