I wrapped up my weekend fieldtrip to NE Colorado today with a tour of Sedgwick 
County.  We set out from Sterling at sunrise and made it to the Stade Wayside 
Reststop in Julesburg by slightly after 7:00.  This is the large riparian track 
along the South Platte right across US 385 from last year's Common Ground Dove 
site.

Things were slow at first, but shortly before 8:00 it really heated up.  Todd 
Deininger and Lynne Miller headed to the right flank and picked up an 
incredible 4 Eastern Screech Owls (in a family group) as well as three 
Ovenbirds.  I manned the middle of the formation with Jean Morgan where we 
picked up eastern Hairy Woodpecker and eastern White-breasted Nuthatch while 
John Vanderpoel probed the weaknesses of the bird defenses along the river.  
John broke through so we rushed reserves in (John Tumasonis and Greg Miller 
(the lesser) along with Jim Guerin and Ann Tagawa) and got most of the avian 
forces to surrender.  (Sorry about that, I've been reading Civil War history 
and got carried away by thoughts of General John Sedgwick, namesake of our 
northeastern most county.)  Our route ended up with Willow Flycatcher (it even 
called once), Nashville Warbler, Red-eyed Vireo, Blackburnian Warbler and 
Olive-sided Flycatcher.

We then entered Julesburg to look for hummingbirds at the elementary school, 
but only had a single Calliope plus Baltimore Oriole.  While reprovisioning at 
the Julesburg Subway Prairie Falcon and a family of Blue Grosbeaks passed 
through.  Then we exited town via the Pony Express road on our way to Ovid.  
This managed a pair of Solitary Sandpipers at the one pond enroute, but little 
else.  At the Ovid bridges, three Wood Ducks flew off the river and John V. had 
a pair of Field Sparrows.

In Ovid we worked the Lodgepole Creek for another Red-eyed Vireo before we 
happened on some sort of tree with little black berries which sported lots of 
activity including Black-headed Grosbeak, Orange-crowned Warbler plus Baltimore 
and Orchard Oriole.  From that point, things heated up and cooled off 
simultaneously, although we did have some nice additional shorebirds at Jumbo 
including Short-billed Dowitcher (S), Long-billed Dowitcher (L), Willet (L) and 
Sanderling (S).  Is there a more regular spot in the state than Jumbo for 
Sanderling?

A great day and great trip.  We totaled 127 species, including 21 shorebirds 
and 11 warblers over two days.

Bill Kaempfer
Boulder

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