I birded some in the lower Arkansas Valley east of Pueblo today.  In
eastern Pueblo County where hundreds of white (including at least one blue
phase) and dark geese had crowded into one of the few ponds with open water
now that cold temps have frozen much of the water where drought has lowered
water levels.  On Lake Meredith in Otero County I saw more than 500 white
geese with my spotting scope (that lake is closed to allow waterfowl to
rest).  Surprisingly I didn't see any white geese on John Martin Reservoir
(from the dam) or in fields in that area.

I found at least 2, likely 3, dark Harlan's Hawks, 3-4 Bald Eagles, 2
Prairie Falcons, several Northern Harriers and a number of typical
Red-tailed Hawks in Otero County.  Lake Henry was almost totally frozen
over, again related to very low water level.  There was water being moved
into Lake Meredith--this is how most of these irrigation reservoirs are
filled during the winter water storage plans.  Lake Holbrook was still bone
dry.

>From the dam over John Martin I could see about a hundred American White
Pelicans, 25 or so Double-crested Cormorants, hundreds of white-headed
gulls and thousands of distant waterfowl.  Lake Hasty was mostly frozen
over with a few waterfowl on the small amount of open water.

I have uploaded photos of one of the Prairie Falcons, some of the mixed
geese, and a Bald Eagle onto my Birds and Nature
blog<http://BirdsAndNature.blogspot.com>

SeEtta Moss
Canon City
Blogging for Birds and Blooms magazine @
http://birdsandbloomsblog.com/author/seetta-moss/
Personal blog @ BirdsAndNature.blogspot.com<http://birdsandnature.blogspot.com/>
.

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