Greetings All,

So, I started today at Crow Valley in the drizzle -- excellent fallout 
conditions, only there wasn't a fallout. Indeed, birds from Western Kingbird to 
Barn Swallow to Wilson's Warblers seem to arrive at the south end and proceed 
north. Migrant passerines will sometimes backtrack to find suitable habitat 
after migrating much of the night. The fact that the were moving north 
(backtracking) THROUGH Crow Valley suggests that they did not find it that 
attractive. It was rather non-buggy.. no food, no reason to stay.


Beyond the BLACK-THROATED GREEN WARBLER that was there, I also had my first 
migrant Wilson's Warblers and Western Tanagers of the season and 3 Townsend's 
Warblers 


At Jackson Lake State Park, I birded the trees from the visitor center to the 
boat launch (Ha! Mud Launch :o).
Highlights included 2 AMERICAN REDSTARTS, a startling NINE Townsend's Warblers, 
a Dusky Flycatcher, and a nice assortment of regular migrants. The oriole flock 
from Sunday was still about with a nearly 10 Bullock's and Orchards each + 1 
female BALTIMORE ORIOLE.


I birded Jackson Reservoir's mudflats by parking at the Outlet Channel and 
walking north for a mile or two. I went as far north as the water did, and I 
saw a fair number of shorebirds, but rare stuff eluded me ... until my return 
trip. The Peregrine decided to grab a meal, which it did pretty efficiently 
(probably a Baird's), but a couple good swipes got many of the gulls and all of 
the shorebirds to swirl around. When the dance was done, suddenly I saw 4 
Pectoral Sands, 2 Semi Plovers, the juv CURLEW SANDPIPER , and a BUFF-BREASTED 
SANDPIPER (probably adult) + far more Baird's than I'd tallied on the outgoing 
stroll. 


Final shorebird totals were--
2 Semipalmated Plovers
22 Killdeer (only!)
41 American Avocets
2 Spotted Sandpipers
108 Lesser Yellowlegs
2 Marbled Godwits
2 Sanderling
5 Semi Sandpipers
47 Least Sandpipers
1025 Baird's Sandpipers
4 Pectoral Sandpipers
1 Curlew Sandpiper
70 Stilt Sandpipers
1 Buff-breasted Sandpiper
2 Short-billed Dowitchers (juvs)
2 Long-billed Dowitchers (1 ad, 1 juv)
41 Wilson's Phalaropes
1 Red-necked Phalarope


Additionally, there were >1000 Franklin's Gulls, about 3500 Am White Pelicans, 
90 GB Herons, 70 Snowy Egrets, 6 Great Egrets, and >100 WF Ibis (okay, not all 
ID'd to species, but many were), providing quite a scene, though one scattered 
over a fairly wide area.


On the way home, the Weld County Road 59 ponds, amazingly, are still brimming 
over with water. Loloff looks good, and had a nice assortment of shorebirds, 
but nothing vaguely uncommon at all.


Good Birding
Steven Mlodinow
Longmont, CO

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