Hello, Birders.

I spent a few hours early this Thursday morning, July 4th, looking for birds 
along the US-287 corridor of east-central Boulder County, with the following 
results:

1. Little Gaynor Lake was the best I've seen it since those obnoxious bubblers 
were installed years ago. As soon as I pulled in, I saw a Black-necked Stilt, 
uncommon in Boulder County. Then I saw another, sitting on a nest. That bird 
got up once or twice to stretch or tend the nest, but otherwise hung tight the 
half hour I was there. I'm not sure if the species has nested previously in the 
county. Other semi-notable birds for early July in Boulder County were 2 Lesser 
Scaups, 2 Ruddy Ducks, and 2 Redheads. Also present were lots of Mallard 
families, a Gadwall family (hen with 7 young), and numerous adult Blue-winged 
and Cinnamon teals. More: a calling Virginia Rail; a calling Ring-necked 
Pheasant; lots of American Avocets and Killdeer and a few Spotted Sandpipers; 
and, finally, an intriguing adult cormorant. The bird looked good in all but 
two annoying respects for Neotropic Cormorant; it seemed the same size as a 
Double-crested (although I had none for direct comparison), and its narrow, 
limited, pinched-back, yellow gular patch showed no white border that I could 
discern. Otherwise, though, the bird was good for Neotropic: impressively 
long-tailed (seen in flight and perched); relatively slight bill; details, as 
previously noted, of the gular patch; and loral area good for Neotropic. Call 
it a spuh. I see lots of those. The bird flew away after I'd studied it 
extensively, but I wouldn't be surprised if it comes back. Maybe someone else 
will find it, and get a more definitive (alternate, actually) study of the 
bird. Anyhow, conditions seem great at Little Gaynor, and I suspect the site 
will produce an interesting shorebird or other water bird or three over the 
next couple of months.

2. Panama Reservoir has very high water, so I'm not expecting a lot of 
shorebirds there anytime soon. But it did have a few birds of interest, among 
them: 3 Orchard Orioles, including a begging youngster; 2 Wood Ducks; and a 
pretty-as-can-be adult Franklin's Gull just floating out in the middle of the 
Rez. I heard another Ring-necked Pheasant here.

3. Prince Lake No. 2 had very high water, so forget about shorebirds. But it 
did have--wait for it--a Ring-necked Pheasant. Any time you find 3 Ring-necked 
Pheasants in one morning in eastern Boulder County, it can mean only one thing: 
Someone recently released a bunch.

4. The Boulder Creek crossing at Hwy 52 had 2 Wood Ducks, 1 Orchard Oriole, 
and, shockingly, no pheasants.

5. The Boulder Creek crossing at Kenosha Road had a ginormous swarm of Cliff 
Swallows, one of which didn't fit in a box. I'm not saying, or even intimating, 
that the bird of interest was a Cave Swallow. I'm just saying it was a 
Petrochelidon with characters that didn't match well for either Cliff or Cave.

Ubiquitous were Blue Grosbeaks, Vesper Sparrows, Swainson's Hawks, and 
especially Cliff Swallows.

Nothing else of note for me this morning, but I figured I'd give the low-down 
on conditions out there, you know, for BoCo Big Year birders who might be 
contemplating a run out east in the weeks to come. Here goes:

6. Prince Lake No. 1 is low, and nicely ringed with mysterious green slime. 
There were at least 6 Spotted Sandpipers out there, and some Killdeer, and 
nothing else. I think this site could have an interesting shorebird or two in 
the days ahead.

7. The City of Lafayette People's Water Purification Facility off US-287 has 
high water, cormorants, and nothing else. Just to the north, though, on the 
west side of the highway is a flooded field that bears watching.

8. Erie Rez is much the same. High water, corms, a Western Grebe, and no reason 
to go back.

9. Kenosha Pond, off 115th Street, not Kenosha Road (how confusing is that?) 
had deep water and a llama.

10. A complex of ponds to the east of Kenosha Pond looked great--but from quite 
a distance. Lots of corms and American White Pelicans out there, plus smaller 
things swimming around. Anybody know how to access those ponds?

11. On the matter of access, or lack thereof, Big Gaynor Lake has deep water, 
nice cattails, and pelicans that can be viewed without trespassing.

Ted Floyd
[email protected]
Lafayette, Boulder County, Colorado
                                          

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