Hello all,

I spent a marvelous weekend exploring in south eastern Colorado in Otero, 
Prowers and Baca Counties with one brief foray into Las Animas County. It was a 
gorgeous, sunny and warm (72-79 degrees for the high) weekend. Apparently my 
primary goal of the weekend was to test Ebird's filters as many birds popped up 
as rare. I basically would see a bird, get my binoculars on it to ID it, watch 
for as long as I could or wanted to, put the bird into the ebird app - and 
"Rare" would pop up. This wasn't every bird but it happened quite often, even 
with birds that didn't seem rare at all, but perhaps just early.


Friday I meandered on my way from Colorado Springs to Lamar with stops at Rocky 
Ford SWA, Holbrook Reservoir, Cheraw Lake, Las Animas Fish Hatchery, and Lamar 
Community College woods.  The Rocky Ford highlight was 45 magnificent American 
White Pelicans circling in the sky; a pile of car window glass at one of the 
parking areas dissuaded me from my intended walk. There was almost nothing at 
Holbrook but a Bald Eagle and Prairie Falcon and a few vocal Killdeer. Cheraw 
had a good variety of ducks while the fish hatchery held nothing of note; I 
ended my day at Lamar Community College where two male Northern Cardinals, a 
Red-bellied Woodpecker and my first warbler of the year, Yellow-Rumped Warbler 
kept me entertained along with a host of other birds. My favorite moment at the 
end of the day happened as I sat by a pool of water behind the college and a 
Sharp-shinned Hawk flew in and landed about 10 feet away. It stayed just long 
enough to notice me and then was off again- I definitely had a close view of 
that bird! Heading to the hotel for the night, I noticed a large group of geese 
in the sky north east of Lamar and went out to check them out. I managed to 
track them down as they dropped into a farmer's field and was able to pick out 
about 10 Ross's Geese amongst the 500 Snow Geese and 150 Canada Geese before 
the light completely faded. What a treat!


Saturday I went down to Baca County visiting Carizzo Canyon and Cottonwood 
Canyon, seemingly a stone's throw from the border of Oklahoma and New Mexico. 
The wind was blowing hard all day, which made for difficult photography and 
listening conditions. Even so, that area of the state is just magical and 
people are few and far between. I think I saw 4 people in the span of about 8 
hours in the Comanche Grasslands. When I was stopped at the side of County Road 
M to watch some meadowlarks, a rancher in a truck stopped to ask me if it was 
rush hour (as there was 2 of us on the road); he was still laughing at his own 
joke as he drove away.  At Carizzo, the water is high enough to get my feet wet 
to walk the trail (passes over the creek twice) but the Canyon itself is just 
gorgeous with deciduous trees starting to leaf out. I saw hundreds of American 
Robins, a group of Chihuahan Ravens calling, chasing and harassing  a 
Red-tailed Hawk, a Canyon Wren singing away and a Loggerhead Shrike, amongst 
other birds. Cottonwood Canyon was quiet overall though the onslaught of robins 
continued. I added three Rufous-Crowned Sparrows, Canyon Towhees, Sage 
Thrashers, Mountain Bluebirds, one McCown's Longspur and a few others.


Sunday (today) was another magical day when I headed back west and north, not 
as windy and much warmer to start the day than Saturday. I started off at Lake 
Hasty with a large covey of Scaled Quail, a great variety of ducks including 
Blue-winged Teal, Pied-billed Grebes, 2 Eastern Bluebirds, singing Marsh Wrens, 
a Red-bellied Woodpecker, 2 Eastern form White-breasted Nuthatches calling 
repeatedly and much more. A stop at the little cemetery north of John Martin 
Reservoir produced a Yellow-bellied Sapsucker, Barn Owl and Great-Horned Owl. 
Fort Lyon SWA had hundreds of American Wigeon, several dozen Northern Pintail 
and several raptors, including a dark-morph Harlan's Red-tailed Hawk. Oxbow SWA 
was quiet and hot early this afternoon, producing a Northern Mockingbird and 
not much else. Not surprisingly, Bent's Old Fort was also really quiet though I 
was treated to a Ring-necked Pheasant bolting across the road.


I picked up an astounding 16 first of the year birds this weekend, much more 
than I expected and so much fun!


Happy birding all,

Gloria Nikolai, now back home in El Paso County



FYI: The rare birds this weekend included the Northern Mockingbird, Pied-billed 
Grebe, Rufous-crowned Sparrow, Sage Thrasher, Canyon Towhee and Say's Phoebe.


-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Colorado Birds" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to cobirds+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com.
To post to this group, send email to cobirds@googlegroups.com.
To view this discussion on the web visit 
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/cobirds/BLUPR19MB00849A461B40DC848066EDE1B6880%40BLUPR19MB0084.namprd19.prod.outlook.com.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to