I've been keeping casual track for 24 years, although I have gotten new
birds when leading field trips up to my deck! (thank you)
I've seen 135 species (see habitat below), which includes a single
ring-necked pheasant that I saw up here about 30 years ago, when my in-laws
lived here.
Favorite
At 5:48 PM, we had 800 to 1,200 sandhill cranes flying overhead.
We are 3 miles west of Lyons, and they were heading South (duh) and
a little westish.Maybe heading for the water behind the dam at Nederland
for the night??? Or maybe veering back east to Golden, etc.
davis
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Love it when two species appear at the same time, but not commonly.
Along with the daily Pinyon Jays (7ish) and Clark's Nutcrackers (3), I
heard (low clouds so
did not see) Sandhill Cranes noonish today.I just cannot visualize the
sandhills and
nutcrackers in the same picture, or even on the
of the big
corral on the south side. Not as far west as the house W of the corral.
There was a Virginia's Warbler working in the brush on the south side of
the corral at the same spot.
Raymond Davis - Lyons
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In response to many requests, I'll host an open deck to view pinyon jays
(hopefully) on
Saturday morning Oct 9... 7:30am to noonish.
I've been seeing 3-5 pinyon jays daily for about a month now. The water
and feeders usually
produce plenty of other stuff to look at while you're waiting.
>From
In the 1983 James Lane Birder's Guide to the Rio Grande Valley, he posits
that the name changing is some really just some sort of game with points,
such as
1 pt for just adding Northern, or changing American to Common etc.
up to 5 points for a split (1 previous bird into 2 separate specie)
7
Counted 83, probably 100 +, about 200 yds south of Pipit Rd, just east of
County Line Rd.
davis
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much to my dismay, as I haven't cleaned out my 58 birdhouses yet, my
neighbor 2 miles west at about 7,000 ft., had a male mountain bluebird on
Friday, Feb 26.
Raymond Davis... at 6,000 ft. NW of Lyons
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I usually have a meadowlark in my little meadow here in the foothills at
6,000 ft. in the
summer. Have never heard or seen one except for the warm 4-5 months, so I
suspect
they altitudinally migrate down to the plains at least.
Weirdly this year... we've had 2-3 Clark's Nutcrackers for 2-3
For about 3.5 weeks, I've had 2-4 Clark's Nutcrackers hanging around (I
feed peanuts).
I have, in 20 years, seen singles for 1 day here in various Septembers, but
never had an extended multi-visit. I have NOT noticed unusual other
montaine birds; juncos and red-breasted nuthatches have shown up,
Unusual mix of corvids at my house this morning. NOT Magpie, Crow, Raven,
or Blue Jay.
I'm at 6,000 ft, in open ponderosa (definitely NOT pinyon-juniper), 18
miles N of Boulder, and got pinyon jay, scrub jay, Steller's (the usual)
jay, and a Clark's Nutcracker this morning.
Hint. they all
I have no idea, but I like the icterid theme, so I'll go with Orchard
Oriole, which I've never heard.
Davis, Lyons
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I read somewhere years ago that the young crossbills bills cross at about 3
weeks, and they can cross either left or right, with no apparent reason
(just like humans left-right handedness?)
Davis. in Larimer County with only 15 Cassin's Finches.
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Just a little interesting piece (hopefully).
I have a 14 foot stump of a huge ponderosa next to my deck. While putting
an eye-ring in the top for canopy stretching, i thought hey... let's drill
a hole. So I drilled out a 1.4 inch hole about 5 inches from the top,
then used a coupla drill bits
Was hoping to get some overflow of the Estes Park Rosy Finches, but instead
got 30+ Cassin's Finches. Reasonable consolation prize.
Davis - at 6,000 ft. 4 mi NW of Lyons
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While cleaning out some of my 57 birdhouses (hey, I'm retired!), I opened
up a bluebird box 6 feet up a tree trunk, and found 5 young chipmunks...
very active, and about 75% adult sized. Who knew they would breed in
March!!
davis - 4 miles NW of Lyons at 6,000 ft.
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, and an unseen
raptor that keeps
chasing everyone off, but I haven't seen it.
Also no sign of rosy finches, although they often blow down here when Estes
Park gets
dumped on.
Raymond Davis - at 6,000 feet 4 miles NW of Lyons (just barely in Larimer
County)
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Not quite positive, but just heard a couple of calls up high (very faint)
while shoveling
a trace of snow. Heading south, I believe.Would be quite late, I think.
Be interested to see if anyone in Golden hears them about 2:15 ish.I'm
4 miles NW of Lyons, just a hill west of the front
At my place, at 6,000 ft. 4 miles NW of Lyons, just had sandhill cranes fly
over.Heard them, but did not spot them to count.
Pinyon jay flock is unreliable but almost daily; also have had 7 turkeys
coming by most days.
Been hearing multiple Townsend Solitaires most every day.
Raymond Davis
Boulder Audubon trip this morning.
1 continuing Glossy Ibis (first pond SE of parking)
3 male Rose-breasted Grosbeaks (back by heron rookery)
14 Cedar Waxwings (ditto)
no other warblers seen except multiple yellows.
Raymond Davis - Lyons
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Raymond Davis
above Lyons
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Some University of Wyoming researchers (wildlife genomics) banded
hummingbirds at my place last night and this morning (6/15). They banded
27 broad-tailed hummers, 3 males, and 24 females, of which 6 were
pregnant. They also banded 2 black-chinned females, both of which were
VERY pregnant.
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