Greetings All

This afternoon, on the eastside of Blue Lake (Adobe Creek Reservoir), David 
Dowell and I had a male LESSER NIGHTHAWK. We were taking Kiowa County Road A 
into the SWA, just as the road starts to curve right, there is a dirt track 
next to a ditch going off to the right. This road goes to a grove of dusty 
tamarisk bordering a sandy field. The nighthawk flushed from along the edge of 
the trees, flew low past us, and turned the corner, at the end of the grove 
thus disappearing from flight. Beyond the usual wing markings/structure, this 
bird was notable in how it kept low, never vocalized, and flew differently from 
a Common Nighthawk, with stronger shallower beats. This is a bird I've seen 
thousands of in Baja California. Later we flushed Common Nighthawks, which rose 
above the treetops quickly, "peenting" as they went. At Blue Lake itself, on 
the east side, we found a couple MOUNTAIN PLOVER, 20+ LB CURLEW, and a MARBLED 
GODWIT. On BENT COUNTY ROAD 10, heading south from Blue Lake, we found 15+ 
MOUNTAIN PLOVER in a field, and a bit later on, a couple of BURROWING OWLS


Backtracking, at Neegronda Reservoir, Kiowa County, we found a 
rare-for-midsummer Osprey and another 10 or so LONG-BILLED CURLEW. We also had 
tarantula hawks and a beautiful rose tipped pregnant female Lesser Earless 
Lizard. 


At Tempel Grove, just inside Bent County, we had WHITE-WINGED DOVE (singing), 
BALTIMORE ORIOLE, EASTERN PHOEBE (by the bridge), BC Hummingbird, and Lesser 
Goldfinch


Notably, between Tempel Grove and Blue Lake, we encountered a number of 
Chihuahuan Ravens that seemed uncharacteristically like Chihuahuan Ravens. Many 
apparent Ch Ravens in Colorado seem odd, with shorter-than-expected feathering 
on the culmen, they call somewhat betwixt what one would expect from a Ch and a 
Common Reaven, or other traits are off. These birds all had extensive 
feathering on the culmen (photos to be posted) and the ones that called sounded 
nothing at all like a Common Raven.


So, now, on to oddness at Flagler SWA. There we had a list of birds that 
included the following remarkable combination:
Canvasback
RN Duck
Swainson's Thrush (singing, yet!)
Pine Siskin
Montane WB Nuthatch
Montane Hairy Woodpecker
Baltimore Oriole (2)
Rose-breasted Grosbeak
Red-eyed Vireo
Spotted Towhee
plus many Orchard Orioles (no Bullock's tough), eastern Warbling Vireos, etc.


Good Birding
and Good Night, or rather, morning
Steve Mlodinow
Longmont CO




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