March is the month indicating that our volunteer Winter Raptor Surveys for 
HMANA are over for the season. We have to do one in December, January and 
February that we devise and follow the same route each time, and since we 
do 4 survey routes, and it is suggested by HMANA that we do them roughly in 
the same week of each month, we are busy every week during those months, 
avoiding days when it  snows or severely windy, and having to wait a few 
days till any heavy snow melts for our safety.

If interested, you can go to the WRS link below, and once you find one of 
our surveys from the list (or from the sidebar map in Colorado), there is a 
drop-down menu where you can see all of the results for that survey for the 
past 2 seasons.

In a way I’m happy it’s over as it’s a lot of work entering the data into 
the winter raptor survey website as it usually takes me between 2 and 2.5 
hours to enter each report online.  
https://wrs.hmana.org/public_html/index.php 

I have to enter each raptor separately into the website with its location 
with latitude and longitude; species; number; light or dark morph; 
adult/immature; male/female; perched/flying/soaring; type of habitat; and I 
add a description (which was originally required when I started in 2016 but 
not any longer, of where it was seen, and how far from us each raptor was 
in meters, and the compass direction). Most of you will not be able to see 
all the details I have entered, which I suspect they do to protect rare 
species – only WRS participants like Robert Beauchamp who has a survey in 
the Nunn Raptor Alley can see them. 

1.     The most recent survey was in North Boulder. *Highlights were a dark 
morph Ferruginous Hawk flying with a light morph, an intermediate morph 
streak-breasted type Red-tailed Hawk, a Prairie Falcon, and 8 Golden Eagle 
(6 adult, 2 juvenile).* The total number of raptors was much higher than we 
usually see – the highest we’ve had has been 65.

Golden Eagle           8

Prairie Falcon          1

Ferruginous Hawk  6

Great Horned Owl  1 on a nest

Bald Eagle                21

Northern Harrier    5

American Kestrel    11

Red-tailed Hawk     50

Total                          103 

https://ebird.org/checklist/S162637012 Intermediate morph RT

https://ebird.org/checklist/S162870641 GE

https://ebird.org/checklist/S160877026 FH on last survey

https://ebird.org/checklist/S160873538 GE on last survey

https://ebird.org/checklist/S160937850 Harlan’s on last survey

 

2.     The survey before that was the South and East Boulder one, and was 
disappointing in that we saw only a fraction of raptors we usually see, 
which is between 44 and 60 raptors. I have no idea why.

           Bald Eagle              !3

           Red-tailed Hawk   3

           Total                        16

 

3.     The survey we run including Rocky Mountain Arsenal NWR, and mainly 
west of Denver International Airport up to Barr Lake had an average to 
higher number of raptors. *Highlights were 4 Prairie Falcon, a Krider’s 
Hawk, and a Harlan’s Hawk*

           Prairie Falcon           4

           Merlin                        1

            Ferruginous Hawk   6

            Cooper’s Hawk         1

            Northern Harrier      4

            American Kestrel      18

            Bald Eagle                  20

            Red-tailed Hawk       40

            Total                           94

https://ebird.org/checklist/S162134302 Krider’s

https://ebird.org/checklist/S162303114 Harlan’

 

4.     The survey we ran between Bennett and Jackson Lake had previously 
been posted on COBirds. *Highlights were the only Rough-leg we saw all 
season which was a juvenile, 4 Prairie Falcon, 4 Merlin, 1 Harlan’s Hawk, 
and one possible Western/Harlan’s intergrade.*

           Rough-legged Hawk      1

            Prairie Falcon                 4

               Merlin                          4

               Ferruginous Hawk      3

               Northern Harrier        6

               Bald Eagle                    5

               American Kestrel        25

               Red-tailed Hawk         7

               Total                              55

 

https://ebird.org/checklist/S161476272 Harlan’s

 

*We are leading a DFO trip to the Dinosaur Ridge Hawk Watch on March 16, 
2024 for North-bound migrating raptors in flight. If there is enough 
interest we will continue them at regular intervals.*

.

Ajit I Antony and Liza Antony

Central Park, which used to be called Stapleton

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