Please give specific dates at each site for RBA. Joyce Takamine On Monday, May 14, 2018 at 8:40:05 AM UTC-6, Dan Stringer wrote: > > I tried to wait until all the good birders and birds had passed through SE > Colo before I visited, but I ran into a few of both this weekend anyway. > Highlights in the Carrizo and Cottonwood Canyon area (Baca County) were > Long-billed Curlew, Rufous-crowned Sparrow, skylarking Cassin's sparrow, > Black-throated Sparrow, Grasshopper Sparrow, Olive-sided Flycatcher, > Ash-throated Flycatcher, Ladder-backed Woodpecker, Canyon Wren, Bewick's > Wren, Blue Grosbeak, Black-chinned Hummingbird, a Golden Eagle being > harassed by a Chihuahuan Raven (amazing size difference), Juniper Titmouse, > Cassin's Kingbird. > > At Hasty Campground (Bent County) highlights were Lazuli Bunting, Indigo > Bunting, Ovenbird, Tennessee Warbler, Yellow-breasted Chat. Melody Tempel > Grove (Bent) had Common Yellowthroat, Wilson's Warbler, Orange-crowned > Warbler, Blackpoll Warbler, Ovenbird, Red-headed Woodpecker. > > At Lamar Community College Woods (Prowers County) on Friday evening a > beautiful Hooded Warbler made a brief but prominent eye-level appearance, > and near the sign at the north end was a Field Sparrow. Back in there early > Sunday was light rain, mist and cool, from 6 a.m. to 9 really slow and > quiet, Northern Cardinal, Mississippi Kites, and three thousand mourning > Doves. Then it cleared up and got a bit more active, a Black & White > Warbler (female I think), Warbling and Red-eyed Vireo, still pretty slow. > As I was leaving, standing between the woods and parking area with trees on > both sides, a large flock of about 20 Yellow-rumped Warblers came through > and with them were a Chestnut-sided Warbler, a Mourning Warbler, and a > stunner Northern Parula. Warblers 30 feet up hopping around between the > edge of the woods and trees in the grassy area, acting like they were > famished, it seemed more overwhelming due to the high count of YRWA, but it > was exciting and dizzying to pick out these three fast-moving special > warblers...two minutes like that has never quite happened before for me. > > On the south side of Thurston Reservoir (Prowers) I heard a Yellow-billed > Cuckoo, just southeast of there photographed a single Sandhill Crane, > strolling along in a field of corn stubble? At Neenoshe Reservoir (Kiowa > County) I saw Snowy Plovers, a Common Tern sitting right next to a > Bonaparte's Gull, and a flying Forster's Tern. At the Kiowa County side of > Adobe Creek Reservoir, numerous Yellow Warblers and a Wilson's Warbler were > in the Tamarisk, assumedly just passing through. At the Bent County side I > drove all the way around to the end of the public road and took the > two-track down to the water. While scoping sandpipers I heard a Tern hit > the water and come up, in my binoculars I strongly thought it may have had > a yellow bill, but it went quickly up and away, not able to identify. That > will bring me back. > > All in all I saw only a moderate amount of shorebirds on all of the area > reservoirs, eleven expected species, there was a lot of lonesome shoreline. > Some nice warblers in the above-mentioned places but it took three > dawn-to-dark days to find them. More Burrowing Owls than I've ever seen > along the routes, and more brilliant Bullock's Orioles than I thought > existed. And really, the highlight of the weekend was not so much birds, > but rather the amazing Carrizo Canyon which I hiked in both directions from > the parking area till I was ready to drop. A very wild and beautiful place. > > Dan Stringer > Larkspur, CO >
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