Our DFO group heard the Sedge wren 30 min ago about 40 m south of the point Cole posted. David SuddjianLittleton, COSent from my iPhoneOn Nov 10, 2022, at 12:03 PM, Cole Sage wrote:Hi all, There is a Sedge Wren at Cherry Creek State Park. Seen on both sides of the trail. 39.6224750,
Hi all,
There is a Sedge Wren at Cherry Creek State Park. Seen on both sides of the
trail. 39.6224750, -104.8311608
Cole Sage and Luke Pheneger
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Three of us were surprised to see the Sedge Wren yesterday 3/3 at the same
spot it was originally found by Cole Sage in January. S Platte Park Area, W
side of river about 1/3 mile N of the parking area. (39.5710642,
-105.0407814) We took a leisurely stroll around the lakes in 60 degree
Sedge wren glimpsed and heard calling on east side of South Platte River about
half mile north of parking areas.
Nick Komar
Fort Collins CO
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The Sedge Wren continues this morning at the same location where Cole found
it. Great find and thanks for getting the word out. Lots of happy birders
this nice morning.
Gregg Goodrich
Highlands Ranch
On Friday, January 7, 2022 at 8:36:03 AM UTC-7 Nick Komar wrote:
> Cole, great job
Cole, great job identifying and documenting this rare bird for Colorado!
Nick Komar
Fort Collins CO
> On Jan 6, 2022, at 9:28 PM, Cole Sage wrote:
>
> Hi all,
>
> This evening just before sunset while birding at South Platte Park I found a
> Sedge Wren foraging along the river. I first
Hi all,
This evening just before sunset while birding at South Platte Park I found
a Sedge Wren foraging along the river. I first noticed call notes that I
thought were a Winter Wren’s but as I got closer they sounded off. When the
wren appeared it was clearly not a stub-tailed Wren but a Sedge
Thank you, Lauren; it probably bears repeating regularly, since one, people
don’t “get” it the first time, and two, new people are (hopefully, it’s a good
thing) regularly joining the birding world, that our ethics as birders require
us to put the birds’ safety and health first. NO exceptions.
I should also say that I did not speak up. Left that out!
Lauren
Lauren Burke
It's a bird thing, it just is!
Sent from my iPhone
> On Oct 19, 2020, at 2:37 PM, Lauren Burke wrote:
>
> The Sedge Wren is being seen in a place that is walking distance from my
> home, so I went to try my luck.
The Sedge Wren is being seen in a place that is walking distance from my home,
so I went to try my luck. The wren was seen around 1:45 by a group of five
birders including me. I got a nice five seconds or so before he dove for
cover.
I know the only reason I got to see the bird was because
My Sedge wren experience: I have seen and photographed 8 of 10 wren species
found in N. Am., six locally and 2 in Pueblo. The Sedge wren would have
been #9 (with #10 Cactus wren unlikely for here.) I was excited for the
possibility of a lifer sighting locally. The drive, ugh. Upon arrival I
Hi Everyone, The Sedge Wren popped up for several minutes around 3:35 this
afternoon 10/18. It was in the fallen cottonwood but also spent time in the
grass next to the nearby thistles. A black camp chair has been placed at the
spot. Mark Miller Longmont, CO Sent via the Samsung Galaxy S8
Me and Dave Ely found a Sedge Wren working the grassy thickets on the east
side of Country Vista Park this morning. It was at the
coordinates 39.919159, 105.048337, underneath a fallen cottonwood and
adjacent brush for most of the morning. Street parking can be done on W
123rd Pl and walking
Hi all,
Yesterday evening my brother and I observed a Sedge Wren along Coal Creek
between where Coal Creek trail crosses under W Cherry St. (near Warembourg
Open Space) and Louisville Community Park. It was a short distance (approx.
50 feet) south of the main trail in the cattails and willow
Birders,
There is currently a Sedge Wren below the dam on the Southeast side of Rose
Pond in the Pueblo portion of Chico Basin Ranch (today 9/21). It has been
silent for a few minutes now but for a while was actively chipping and popped
up for views a few times. It likes the dense Russian
W end of Van's Marsh on S side of road (Benton County near John Martin Res)
Steve Mlodinow
Longmont CO
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Greetings
A couple of hours ago I had a Sedge Wren along the roadside at nw corner of
Union Res.
Turn from County Line Rd (Weld CR 1) onto road that goes along n side of Union
Res.
Immediately you'll pass a house on the right. The road will then bend sharply
left, then back right. There
Just had fantastic looks at a sedge wren in the reeds near the 'pelican
statue' on the N. Side of Sloan's lake at the foot of Vrain street.
The bird was calling in the reeds, and came up several times to 'chatter'.
The sprinklers just came on as I was leaving, so I wonder if the bird
will
A SEDGE WREN was calling often and seen occasionally this morning, and it
is potentially re-findable if calling again. From the easternmost dam
parking area (in Logan County), head east on the dirt road below the dam.
There are signs for State Recreation Area and Fish Management along
this
Still reeling from not going to Dixon this morning and seeing the American
Redstart that Arvind found, I went to Cottonwood Glen/Spring Creek Trail in
West Fort Collins at about 1:30 to see what warblers I might find
(Yellow-Rumped). No luck with rare warblers, however, I did happen upon a
Sedge
Biggerstaff eyepatchtat...@gmail.com
To: cobirds@googlegroups.com, Brad Biggerstaff eyepatchtat...@gmail.com
Sent: Thursday, October 24, 2013 2:49:08 PM
Subject: [cobirds] Sedge Wren, Cottonwood Glen/Spring Creek Trail, Larimer
County
... I went to Cottonwood Glen/Spring Creek Trail in West Fort Collins
This afternoon I saw and heard a secretive Sedge Wren at Dixon Reservoir in
west Fort Collins. Grainy photos available at
https://picasaweb.google.com/105742165113837247842/SedgeWren#5795947624278688034
Though grainy, the photos show streaking on the crown, without the obvious
brownish
COBirders,
I first heard, then saw, then photographed a very cooperative (for that
species) Sedge Wren about 50 feet from where I found a LeConte's Sparrow
(September 17) in a wet sedge meadow surrounded by scattered Russian olives
where the Upper Twin Pond Dam bends 90 degrees south. I was
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