Hello, Birders.

David Gillilan and William Burnidge and I made a too-short trip out to the Fox 
Ranch, Yuma County, and back (via Last Chance, Washington County, of course), 
these past two days, Thursday-Friday, May 24th-25th.

Most of the time, David and I were enslaved by William way out in the lonely 
dune grass of the Fox Ranch. Low diversity there, but who's complaining about 
Greater Prairie-Chickens and Upland Sandpipers at every turn. With the low 
clouds and chilly temps, the songs of those birds were evocative. Grasshopper 
Sparrows occurred in grasshopper-like plagues; we found multiples along most of 
our Friday-afternoon survey transects, and we found multiples at all Friday 
morning-survey transects. Numerous Cassin's Sparrows, too.

William let us bird the Fox Ranch headquarters just a little, where we found 
some nice birds, highlighted by a singing Alder Flycatcher on Thursday 
afternoon. A Red-bellied Woodpecker was hanging out around the headquarters; it 
was an overdue addition to the Fox Ranch list. Other additions to the list, 
also all overdue, were Cinnamon Teal, Redhead, and Willow Flycatcher. We heard 
and briefly saw a male Blackpoll Warbler around the ranch headquarters. Oh, and 
we saw a tantalizing wood-pewee: nice and green, with a perfectly orange lower 
mandible and bold wing bars. But it didn't vocalize. Why it didn't even snap 
its bill. Then it flew away.

Some other odds and ends while William wasn't cracking the whip: 3 Wood Ducks, 
2 Northern Bobwhites, several small groups of Wild Turkeys, 1 Yellow-billed 
Cuckoo, 3 Eastern Screech-Owls, several Red-headed Woodpeckers, only 1 
Swainson's Thrush, 1 Eastern Bluebird, Orchard Orioles galore (even way out on 
the prairie), and 1 Baltimore Oriole. And, seriously, it was a marvelous treat 
to wander amid the Greater Prairie-Chickens and Upland Sandpipers; thanks to 
William for arranging this special opportunity, and thanks to Nathan Andrews 
for hosting us.

At Last Chance, William was most definitely cracking the whip, but we did 
manage to find a Yellow-throated Vireo. Many Swainson's Thrushes, too. Also 
Cassin's Kingbird, Loggerhead Shrike, the three "eastern" mimic-thrush species, 
a couple of Lazuli Buntings, and several Orchard Orioles.

Ted Floyd
[email protected]
Lafayette, Boulder County, Colorado                                       

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Colorado Birds" group.
To post to this group, send email to [email protected].
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
[email protected].
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/cobirds?hl=en.

Reply via email to