Hey all, 

 

I hope Mark, Dan, Elena, et al. all survived and enjoyed the experience of
birding with Steve.  I've gone boid'n with him a few times (when each day
felt like several days), have given this some careful consideration, and
have decided to get some t-shirts made that say:

 

"I survived Birding with Mad Man Steven Mlodinow!"  

 

;-)

 

Thanks all, for allowing me to cross-post this on wsbn - you are hereby
forewarned about birding with him!

 

;-)

 

Migration rocks!

Larry

GJ

 

p.s. seasonal newbies in our yard recently: Great horned owl, Western
screech-owl (0230 hrs this morning and of course I could NOT go back to
sleep), Black-capped chickadee-dee-dee, Western tanager, Blue grosbeak,
Black-headed grosbeak (for a new late date in our yard, 8 Sept), Common
nighthawk, American goldfinch (we always have Lessers, but Americans are
generally below us along the river), and still quite a few hummers of three
species (no Broad-tails)

 

 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf
Of Steven Mlodinow
Sent: Sunday, September 09, 2012 10:06 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [cobirds] NE CO Highlights

 

Greetings All, 

 

What a wild and sleepless weekend in NE Colorado.

I met up with Mark Peterson and Dan Maynard Saturday morning at dawn at the
campground at Jumbo Res, Sedgwick. We quickly found BUFF-BREASTED SANDPIPER
followed a bit later by CHESTNUT-SIDED WARBLER.  The area around Julesburg
was verrrryyyyy quiet, so we headed to Holyoke, Phillips County. In but a
few minutes at the main city park we found ALDER FLYCATCHER, MAGNOLIA
WARBLER, and a multitude of RB Nuthatches (they MUST breed here). The
Holyoke Cemetery was Townsend's Warbler central (then again, where in CO has
this NOT been true) and also held 2 AMERICAN REDSTARTS and a BLACK-AND-WHITE
WARBLER. Off to the Lyons (Lions?) Fishing Hole, where Mark dug up an
OVENBIRD. We then went to Wray, where Stalker Pond was birdy, with the best
bird being a BELL'S VIREO, plus some more minor highlights like Field
Sparrow and Northern Cardinal.

 

I am sure that I missed stuff in the above report, but the essentials are
there. The sheer number of birds this fall is fabulous, with decent numbers
of Western Tans, a few Laz Buntings, and tons of Townsend's Warblers all the
way to the e. CO border. Wilson's Warblers are present in crazy numbers (at
least c/w last fall). Just fabulous passerine birding.

 

Today I went with Elena Klaver to Jackson and then Prewitt. At Jackson, we
found a PHILADELPHIA VIREO -- first at the visitor center, and then later
about 100-200 meters further up the road. It was hanging with a couple
Warbling Vireos and a RED-EYED VIREO. There was also an AMERICAN REDSTART
right by the entrance. We had 5 RB Nuthatches (new arrivals, or at least
missed by me in past visits) by the visitor center In one tangle of Russian
Olives, Elena found a LE Owl. The flats held naught rare other than
spectacular numbers of a wide variety of shorebirds + pelicans, etc. 

 

Near the Inlet Canal, in the woods to the west, we found a vocalizing
INTERIOR WESTERN WB NUTHATCH. Methinks we are in for nice flux of montane
birds downhill.

 

At Prewitt, we decided to head to the Logan County access as that is where
the deep water is, and I've been hankering for Sabine's Gull. Well, no
Sabine's, but on the shore just right of the ladder up to the dam there were
2 juv RUDDY TURNSTONES, later seen by Joey Kellner and others. A Taiga
Merlin also buzzed about, passing into both counties. Walking all the way
from Logan to Washington, we saw relatively few birds, but did have a female
BLACK-THROATED BLUE WARBLER (in Washington County). Lastly, a dozen
Forsteroid Terns loafed on the far side of of the water near the dam
(Logan). When we returned, 4 were flying about, with dark carpal bars and
nice dark on primaries labeling them as COMMON TERNS.

 

Good Birding

Steven Mlodinow

Longmont CO

 

 

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