What an amazing encounter Eric! You might consider taking a video of this 
behavior if you see it again!

Jan Gorski
Highlands Ranch, Douglas, CO

On Thursday, June 27, 2019 at 8:14:08 AM UTC-6, Eric DeFonso wrote:
>
> Hi all,
>
> Indulge me if you will, I want to share a very lengthy but hopefully 
> entertaining account of what for me was an unusual and astonishing 
> experience with a common species...or at least one that many COBirders have 
> been lamenting this year as not being as common as usual.
>
> I was setting up to camp at Smith Reservoir SWA in Costilla County, near 
> Fort Garland. Around 7pm I was on the SE corner of the reservoir with 
> magnificent early evening light behind me illuminating the place, when I 
> spotted a Common Nighthawk (CONI) bounding in the northerly breezes over 
> the water. It's always a delight to catch sight of a CONI flying relatively 
> low and close, allowing for nice looks in the scope, especially in that 
> nice light.
>
> A few moments later, I noticed a second CONI flying near it, also doing 
> the same bounding flight in the breeze. I watched them both carefully, and 
> thought for a moment that I should check to see if by chance one of them 
> might be a Lesser Nighthawk (LENI). Neither fit that description, but I 
> kept checking anyway just to be sure. My one Colorado LENI was seen with 
> the delightful pair of Coen and Brenda over in Nucla a few years ago, also 
> coursing over water with a bunch of CONIs, so it seemed proper to be alert 
> to it here too.
>
> I scanned the rest of the reservoir as well, looking for ducks, herons, 
> and any other waterbirds that might be of interest. I've not spent much 
> time over the years in Costilla County (and apparently not all that many 
> other Colorado birders either, judging from eBird), so county lifers were 
> fairly easy to come by that day. I went back to check on my nighthawks, and 
> now there were 4. I mean 5! Cool. All of them doing the same thing, 
> bounding in the breeze, and working their way towards the middle of the 
> reservoir. I noticed at that point that they'd get to about the middle of 
> the water, and then let the strong breeze blow them all the way back to the 
> south shore, at which point they'd start the process again of working their 
> way to the middle. It was a kind of "conveyor belt" of CONIs, as they 
> hoovered up low-flying insects over the water in their version of a feeding 
> frenzy. Again, I kept checking to see if any of them were LENIs, and none 
> of them fit the bill, but my attention was drawn in now and I kept checking 
> each bird anyway every minute or two, because "you never know".
>
> After several more minutes, I counted the CONIs once more and now there 
> were 10! Wow, that's cool, I'm not used to seeing all that many in one 
> place at one time. Oh sure, maybe when they've just arrived after migration 
> and they are accrued in a few concentrated spots, but I hadn't seen that 
> myself in quite some time, so it was again neat to see. And all of them 
> again engaging in the same "conveyor belt of CONIs", providing a bit of a 
> scanning challenge when they peeled off to start over but also providing a 
> chance for steady viewing if you followed one in the scope as it slowly 
> coursed its way to the middle of the reservoir.
>
> After another several minutes, I counted 16! Wow, now I was getting close 
> to seeing as 
> many as I've ever seen at one place and time. Still checked for LENIs as 
> best I could, but all of them sported very pointed wings. I should mention 
> that the scene was pretty quiet except for the sound of the steady breeze 
> blowing. It was cool to watch all this bird activity occurring in silence. 
> The Eared and Western Grebes seemed curious to see this growing number of 
> CONIs flying over them and foraging so differently from their preferred 
> subaquatic style.
>
> Around 7:30ish it seemed like there were more than 16, so I carefully 
> counted again and now there were 40! Holy cow, that's definitely way more 
> than I've ever seen at once. I figured that seeing that many at once may be 
> typical of a migration flight. but that's something I'd not personally 
> witnessed, so this began to feel like an extraordinary occasion. I thought 
> back to those COBirds posts about the disappearance of CONIs from various 
> local spots in the Front Range, and thought, well, no shortage here at 
> least. I should mention that the surrounding terrain is largely 
> sage/rabbitbrush shrubland and ag areas.
>
> It was quite a challenge at this point to keep track of any individual 
> bird even in the scope. There was no shortage of choices of birds to watch 
> of course, but like trying to watch a single swallow among a cloud in 
> binoculars, a single CONI in the scope proved elusive simply because of all 
> the other choices that were moving about in the scope's field of view. A 
> happy problem to have of course, but it didn't make the search for a 
> possible LENI any easier.
>
> Some minutes later, I thought to count once again. By the way, my method 
> of counting such a dynamic, shifting bunch of birds was to start at the 
> southern end of the water and slowly scan in the bins northward as the 
> birds were slowly making their way there. That way I thought I'd reduce the 
> chance of double-counting since I could count the birds I was scanning past 
> easily (they were flying slow, into the wind), and then count the ones 
> zipping by quickly on their way back to the beginning of the conveyer belt, 
> knowing that I hadn't counted them yet. It was still a rough count because 
> so much is happening pretty quickly but I felt confident in my end result 
> to within +/- 10%. Now I was certain there were at least *93* nighthawks on 
> the reservoir!
>
> Looking with the naked eye, it was clear there were dozens and dozens and 
> dozens of them. Again, all bounding silently in the breeze above the water, 
> but presumably ravaging the insect life in the process with calm, cool 
> efficiency. I definitely had never seen that many CONIs at once. I started 
> to wonder, when does this end? How many birds are going to show up here?? 
> Will anyone believe me?
>
> By 8ish the light was starting to lessen. It was still nice with sunlight 
> streaming over the water, but not as bright as it was an hour earlier. I 
> was still scanning for LENI, but at this point it didn't really matter 
> because it was so amazing to see that many CONIs engaging in this 
> gregarious feeding event, all low over the water and all in easy viewing. I 
> thought for a moment that I really wasn't going to be able to do counts any 
> more, since it was tiring and getting tougher. But I didn't want the late 
> hour (I needed to get to sleep soon for a very early start the next morning 
> with a bird survey) to keep me from knowing *just how many CONIs can fit 
> above a reservoir*, and I also right then began to envision how I might 
> share this remarkable event with the COBirds listserv.
>
> The next count yielded 160 CONIs! At this point I was starting to count by 
> 10s, as quickly as I could before the mass of birds rearranged themselves 
> significantly over the water thus making counts fraught with potential 
> double-counting errors. Again, I didn't doubt my result since it was a 
> veritable cloud of CONIs. The scope field of view at any one time had no 
> fewer than 10-12. I had to be careful too about not counting swallows, 
> because at this point they were getting in on the hoovering conveyor belt 
> action, and in the diminishing light it was getting easier to conflate the 
> numbers of nighthawks and swallows. But even allowing for some amount of 
> counting error, it was clear that there were ever-increasing numbers of 
> CONIs present.
>
> I wondered, "Where are they all coming from??" I looked at the south and 
> west edges of the reservoir and noticed that one or two at a time were 
> regularly joining the scrum from the bordering shrublands. It was as if the 
> CONI call-to-action had been sounded and they collectively were fully aware 
> of what a bonanza Smith Reservoir could be.
>
> Quarter past 8 and the light was fading. The sun had set but I could still 
> resolve individual birds coursing about. Time for one last count before I 
> surrender. *210* this time! So many CONIs, it was truly a spectacle. I wish 
> I could have photographed it somehow, but how do you capture that many 
> birds in this circumstance in a way that people will believe your big fish 
> story? And the birds themselves... how could there be enough for them all 
> to eat in this one spot? Where did all these birds roost? How far had some 
> of them come? Was it like this over all the large SLV bodies of water? Is 
> it like this over other large reservoirs in Colorado, and I'd just never 
> noticed? I have lots of questions, and haven't really had time to look up 
> answers.
>
> The eBird quantity filter tripped at around 100 birds, so at the moment my 
> checklist for the evening doesn't show on the public results, and won't 
> unless it gets confirmed. But for those curious, this is the link to my 
> submitted checklist:
>
> https://ebird.org/view/checklist/S57661005
>
> I don't know if the CONI frenzy continues every night there, but I will be 
> heading back to that area in mid-July for another survey and I plan to camp 
> there again. I would love to hear any stories or accounts of dozens or 
> hundreds of CONIs observed in one place and time, especially over 
> reservoirs. Birds of North America Online says the following about CONI 
> foraging:
>
> "May forage in large groups at local areas. A flock of about 110 
> individuals observed foraging in an urban area west of Toronto, ON, in a 
> 1-km2 area; individuals spaced about 20 m apart (Ewins 1993a 
> <https://birdsna.org/Species-Account/bna/species/comnig/references#REF42078>) 
> and similarly near Regina, SK near dawn in spring (RMB unpub. data). Flocks 
> of 1000's reported in Kansas (Cummings et al. 2003). At Okanagan Falls, BC, 
> 50–300 birds foraged over a 100 m stretch of a river every night (Brigham 
> and Fenton 1991 
> <https://birdsna.org/Species-Account/bna/species/comnig/references#REF42072>
> , Brigham and Barclay 1995 
> <https://birdsna.org/Species-Account/bna/species/comnig/references#REF32847>
> )."
>
> For those discouraged about low numbers of nighthawks in their areas of 
> residence compared to past years, at least be heartened by the fact that at 
> least in the SLV, hundreds of them are gathered and making a good living 
> there this year.
>
> Thanks for reading this far!
> Eric
>
> -----
> Eric DeFonso
> near Lyons, Boulder County, CO
>

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