Yes, very fun discussion and thanks for sharing!
*Where and how long.*
I have lived at 6030 feet west of Horsetooth Reservoir (south of Horsetooth
Mt. Park) for 21 years. I started with one bird feeder about 10 years ago.
That mushroomed to more feeders over the last few years. I started casually
journal counting last year and now do a daily EBird count (Robins just
showed up today!)
As I am new to the count, I haven't broken down by species yet. My 40+ list
includes many of the common and migratory birds found in Colorado and at my
elevation with a reliable food source good water sources nearby.
*Notable for me: *Separately, Cooper's and Sharp Shinned Hawk in the tree
outside my window.  I had a Bald Eagle chase a Raven (it had a snake in its
beak) from my yard utility pole with Magpies flying along
opportunistically. I had a Gullnado (most likely reservoir/landfill ring
billed-gulls). And now, we have Wild Turkeys (sometimes 3, sometimes 16
routinely coming through our yard for feeder snacks this year and to ride
on the "merry go round" that is my tray feeder.
And sometimes we can year the SandHill Cranes flying over our area.
Happy Birding.


On Mon, Mar 11, 2024 at 10:40 AM Thomas Heinrich <teheinr...@gmail.com>
wrote:

> Hi all,
>
> Every now and then one of us will share the excitement of adding a rarity
> or new species to a yard list, report yard list totals, or comment on local
> trends. And some of the lists, and variety of species, are really
> impressive (e.g. David Suddjian's, Gary Lefko's).
>
> Yellow Grosbeak, Pyrrhuloxia, Streak-backed Oriole, Long-billed Thrasher,
> Costa's Hummingbird, Laurence's Goldfinch, and even Anhinga come to mind as
> rarities that have shown up in or been observed from yards. (Perhaps the
> recent Brambling, too?)
>
> As a pretty obsessive yard lister (i.e. binocs always on, camera ready
> when outdoors, much of the time indoors too), I often wonder about others'
> experience with yard-listing.
>
> How long have you been keeping your list?
> What's your style of yard listing: casual, mainly feeder watching,
> moderate, dedicated, obsessed?
> How many species?
> Rarest, or favorite species?
> Most memorable experience?
> Location/habitat: urban, suburban, rural, etc?
>
> And the big question: if we tallied up all our yard lists, how close to
> Colorado's 520 species could we get?
>
> It seems likely that certain families would be less well-represented;
> shorebirds, waterfowl, and gulls, for example. But with neighborhoods
> lining bodies of water such as Boyd Lake, Lake Loveland, Marston Reservoir,
> Jackson Lake, and MacIntosh Lake (in Boulder), among many others, many of
> those species theoretically could have been counted on a yard list. Maybe
> some lucky person living on the shores of Boyd Lake has Long-tailed Jaeger,
> Slaty-backed Gull, and Garganey on their yard list!
>
> Wishing all good health, good birding, and an exciting Spring migration!
>
> --Thomas Heinrich
>
>
> *My answers to the questions above*:
> 15 years
> Dedicated to obsessive
> 152 species
> Wood Thrush, Yellow-throated Warbler, N Cardinal, Common Redpoll, Bohemian
> Waxwing
> Watching spring raptor migration from the roof-top, 35 Broad-winged Hawks
> among 130 raptors of 10 species on one high-flow day (4/18/2020)
> Interface between suburban and open space, base of foothills, el. 5600'
>
> --
> Thomas Heinrich
> Boulder, CO
> teheinr...@gmail.com
> www.pbase.com/birdercellist
>
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