Hi all,

I co-led an all-day outing with Judy Scherpelz (exec. director for the
Rocky Mountain Raptor Program) for her annual Birds of Prey class, today
with about 20 participants. The purpose of the trip is, not surprisingly,
to search for raptors that are covered in the curriculum of this fabulous
class that introduces these birds to the general public. We had terrific
weather and hit several hot-spots in Larimer and Weld counties, with
varying success but at least a few notable sightings.

Our most common raptor was predictably the Red-tailed Hawk. Most all the
individuals we spotted were typical *calurus*, but we did see a lovely
dark-morph individual in the wooded area just north of the golf course in
the Ptarmigan Ridge subdivision near Larimer CR 5 near I-25. We also had an
interesting heavily marked bird (intermediate?) at Watson Lake late in the
day.

The next most common was the Northern Harrier, with several individuals
(male, female, and juvenile) affording nice looks along our winding route
throughout the day.

We also tallied a few Bald and Golden Eagles. The Balds were seen at Fossil
Creek and at the Ptarmigan Ridge spot, perched around where their old nest
was located before being blown down sometime in the past year or two. The
highlight Golden was ably spotted by class participant Britney, as it
perched quite inconspicuously on the steep face of Goat Rock that overlooks
Watson Lake. In fact when she initially pointed the bird out to me, I was
pretty sure it would turn out to be a Common Raven when I got the scope on
it. I was happy to be proven wrong.

The shocking disappointment of the day came when driving northward along
Weld CR 27 northward between WCR 90 and 120. To my amazement we found
virtually nothing raptorwise along the route except several American
Kestrels. Judy and I were certain we'd at least pick up a couple
Ferruginous Hawks or Prairie Falcons along the way, but on this glorious
Saturday they too apparently were taking the day off, and thus were nowhere
to be found. It certainly wasn't for our lack of searching that we missed
them.

Despite this setback, Judy made up for it convincingly with a "drive-up
Merlin". She perfectly predicted during our trip-planning this morning that
we might find a Merlin at this one isolated residence located not far from
the WCR 27 route, and sure enough when we drove up in our multiple vans, we
found the bird (a female 'prairie' race, I believe) perched in a tree right
by the road. Everyone in all the vans got great looks at it even though no
one got out of the cars (not wanting to spook it, of course). I personally
was very impressed to get such an 'easy' Merlin.

While most of the participants focused on raptors, I did sneak in a few
quick looks at waterfowl while at Fossil Creek reservoir. The best
sightings there were

3 Greater White-fronted Geese, and
4 Snow Geese (1 was a Blue Goose)

In the end, everyone seemed to get a lot out of the experience, and I was
happy to be a part of what was the first real birding field trip for a
goodly number of participants. I hope they all got infected by the birding
bug even just a fraction as badly as I already have it.


-- 
Eric DeFonso
Boulder, 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