Greetings All,

Yesterday, Nick Moore and I spent 8 hours wandering around Prewitt Reservoir, 
racking up 88 species in the process. Shorebird habitat is excellent, extensive 
and easily accessed if you don't mind walking a mile or so to cover it all. 


We had 19 species of shorebirds, nothing truly rare, with the most interesting 
birds being 2 Mountain Plovers, 2 Sanderlings, a Pectoral Sandpiper, and 3 LB 
Curlews. The Baird's Sandpiper numbers are approaching 2000.


Landbirding along the Inlet Canal (such as it is, no longer flowing, and 
containing just a couple puddles) was superb and bizarre. The most interesting 
birds are listed below:
1 female (immature? 1st year bird?) Northern Parula -- will need to study 
photos to try to age.
2 YR Warblers, on very worn adult and one juv!!!
4 Red-breasted Nuthatches -- is a major irruption on its way?
1 Cordilleran Flycatcher (PS Flycatcher could not be eliminated, however 
unlikely it may -- or may not -- be)
2 Least Flycatchers (do these things migrate as early as mid-July through the 
eastern plains?)
3 singing Laz Buntings and one other calling bird
1 Yellow-billed Cuckoo (I know, expected here, but always fun)


Given how tasty all that was, despite approaching mid-day, we headed for the 
woods below the dam. 
Bird numbers (excepting Common Yellowthroats and Song Sparrows) were low there, 
but we did have another RB Nuthatch, a BH Grosbeak, 2 more YB Cuckoos, and a 
Juv GREEN-TAILED TOWHEE to round out the day of bizarre passerines.


I think I have had fewer migrants at Prewitt on a slow day in May.


What is the cause of all these out-of-season landbirds out on the Plains? Is 
this a "normal" phenomenon, something driven by drought and fire, or ???


Finally, a stop at Jackson Reservoir was generally uneventful, with reasonable 
numbers of expected shorebirds, though 8 or so LB Curlews and a Sanderling are 
of some interest. Most interesting, were 99 MOUNTAIN PLOVERS in the fields just 
n. of the nw. corner of the reservoir.


Good Birding
Steven Mlodinow
Longmont, CO






-- 
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 https://groups.google.com/groups/opt_out.


Reply via email to