For others who might visit Aurora Reservoir infrequently, please note that 
there are free, walk-in gates from the housing areas on the south and east 
ends.  I bike and bird there often, entering through gate number one in the 
Beacon Point neighborhood, just south of the Beacon Point Community Center, 
which you can find on Google maps.
Jean Stevenson, Aurora CO

From: 'Cathy Sheeter' via Colorado Birds
Sent: Sunday, September 13, 2020 1:54 PM
To: Colorado Birds
Subject: [cobirds] Reports from Aurora and Quincey Reservoirs

I bit the bullet and purchased a pass to the Aurora Parks system that covers 
Aurora Reservoir and Quincey Reservoir.  These two locations are only 10-15 
minutes from my house, but since they have a fee, I rarely bird them, and most 
other people do not either.  Despite relatively infrequent birding Aurora Res. 
has in the past turned up such goodies as Yellow-billed Loon and Slatey-backed 
Gull (found by other birders, not myself) and Quincey has hosted a Brown 
Pelican and Brant in the past, so I look forward to seeing what I can find with 
frequent visits.   I will try to hit these locations at least every other week 
until I leave for Arizona and hopefully find some interesting birds this 
fall/winter and help flush out their ebird hotspot lists further.  

Yesterday I hit Aurora Res and walked about 1/3 of the loop.  There is some 
exposed shore line, but not a huge number of shore birds.  Baird's were in good 
numbers.  One Sanderling, one Pectoral, and a handful of other expected 
shorebird species.  Gull numbers (who utilize the nearby landfill every day) 
were already substantial - likely around 3000+, however I wasn't able to pull 
out a large diversity.  One Lesser-black-backed.  The majority of Gulls were 
California, and Ring-billed, with Cals being the most abundant species.  Much 
of the time the flocks were on the furthest shore line and/or in the middle of 
the reservoir, so not great looks.  Riparian habitat on the section I walked 
was overall rather poor, but still held a decent numbers of passerine migrants. 
 The reservoir, as a whole has a good diversity of habitat at this location 
from grasslands to a few groves of trees with willows.  Full checklist at: 
https://ebird.org/checklist/S73500445  

Today I walked the entire 3.5 mile loop around Quincey Reservoir, a place I 
have never birded before, to scout out the habitat.  Throughout much of the 
reservoir there is a lot of excellent riparian habitat with many mature trees, 
willows, and plenty of understory cover.  Despite this, it was not as birdy as 
I had hoped overall.  There is zero shore bird habitat and other than one 
Spotted Sandpiper, no shorebirds.   I did get into two different groups of 
warblers numbering around 25-30 warblers each, with best birds being a 
Nashville, and numerous Townsend's.  Unsurprisingly Wilson's were most 
abundant.    A surprising lack of empidonax (1 Willow was all I saw), again 
despite what looks like excellent habitat and plenty of insects for them.  
Nothing super exciting that tripped the ebird filters, but the place holds a 
lot of promise for migration, and I look forward to visiting again soon.  Full 
checklist at: https://ebird.org/checklist/S73546620   

Good birding-

Cathy Sheeter - Aurora, CO
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