This past Friday afternoon and Saturday I took a trip to northeast Colorado 
primarily to scout for a field trip that I will be leading for CFO next weekend 
(Saturday 8/25 and Sunday 8/26).  If you are interested in joining on that 
trip, please go on line to the CFO website at http://cfobirds.org/ and check 
the CFO Headlines fourth bullet down for more information.

Friday I drove directly to Prewitt Reservoir where the inlet canal area was 
fairly quiet, but I did see a Great Crested Flycatcher along the canal east of 
the parking area.  Once through the woods I discovered that the water was way 
far out, but that there were lots of birds along the shore.  Once I got to 
them, it turned out that virtually all the shorebirds there were Baird's 
Sandpipers-perhaps 90% of 2,000 individuals.  But there some others, a total of 
13 species including Semi-palmated Plover (3), Black-necked Stilt (3), Marbled 
Godwit (1) and Sanderling (2).  A far better strategy would be to start at the 
boat dock where shorebirds are present only about 100 yards away.

I did not walk below the Prewitt dam, but continued on to Sterling.  Flying 
over town I saw one Mississippi Kite and on the drive to North Sterling State 
Park, one Upland Sandpiper on a roadside fence post.  NSSP itself had no 
shorebirds and little other than pelicans, geese and Ring-billed and Franklin's 
Gulls.

When I got up Saturday morning it was really, really foggy in Sterling, I mean 
can't-see-three-car-lengths-ahead-of-you-on-the-road foggy.  The fog and 
overcast didn't burn off until noon and then went to blazing hot!  Given the 
conditions, I decided to drive slowly along Logan County Road 93 south of I-76 
hoping for Greater Prairie Chicken.  I found  6 at two spots four to five miles 
south of the highway!   I continued on to Julesburg driving the Pony Express 
Road between Ovid and Julesburg one of my favorite roads (thanks Henry).  I had 
several Red-headed Woodpeckers and a couple of Eastern Bluebirds.   The 
woodpeckers were noteworthy with 15 to 20 in the same area where I was good 
numbers on the same weekend scouting for a trip last year.  But as I recall, 
but the time of my trip-no Red-headed Woodpeckers.  We will see if the same 
outcome occurs.

The must visit place in Julesburg at the end of the summer is the elementary 
school at Spruce and 5th.  There are plantings of agastache at the school that 
attract hummingbirds.  At least four were present including Broad-tailed and 
Calliope.

Ovid had an adult Cooper's Hawk, but not much else, so on to Jumbo which was 
sort of in between the Prewitt and North Sterling experiences.  There were a 
few shorebirds, maybe 200, but again 90% were Baird's.  At Red Lion I walked 
down to the marsh below the "Little Jumbo" dam where there were Wood Ducks and 
at least three calling Bell's Vireos.  This was a new spot for Bell's for me, 
albeit only a couple of hundred yards from the traditional spot.  The wetlands 
along US 138 are bone dry and birdless.

Noteworthy on this trip was the absence of song bird migration.  I saw three 
Yellow Warblers, only kingbirds besides the previously noted Great Crested 
among flycatchers and only Lark and Grasshopper Sparrows in addition to Lark 
Bunting.  I hope that this changes by next weekend.

Bill Kaempfer
President, Colorado Field Ornithologists
Boulder


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