Hello, Birders.

Early yesterday evening, Monday, Sept. 2, Kei and Hannah and Andrew and I saw 2 
Sanderlings at Ish Reservoir, Boulder County. The birds may have wandered from 
time to time into Larimer County territory, I'm sorry to report.

If you seek only Colorado reportage, stop reading now.

Earlier in the day, we were up in the ever-productive Cheyenne, Laramie, not 
Larimer, County, Wyoming area. The Wyoming Hereford Ranch, on the high plains 
just east of Cheyenne, was as fascinating as ever. One spot had all of the 
following: juvenile Red-naped Sapsucker, adult male Williamson's Sapsucker, 
adult male Yellow-shafted Flicker, adult female Yellow-shafted Flicker, adult 
male Eastern Downy Woodpecker, and adult male Western Downy Woodpecker. If 
that's not the coolest East-meets-West assemblage of woodpeckers, then I'm a 
monkey's uncle. Then again, that would explain something about one of my 
nephews, but I digress.

More East-meets-West: We saw a Great Crested Flycatcher and a Rose-breasted 
Grosbeak in one spot at the Wyoming Hereford Ranch, and, then, in another spot, 
we saw and heard an apparent Black-capped x Mountain Chickadee hybrid, plus 3 
Ruby-crowned Kinglets (which I believe bred there this summer). In good numbers 
were migrant Western Wood-Pewees, Wilson's Warblers, and Chipping Sparrows. I 
think we're the only Labor Day birders who didn't see American Redstarts, but 
we were compensated with a couple of Townsend's Warblers.

The nearby Hereford reservoirs (meaninglessly numbered 1 and 2, like the two 
Prince Lakes in Boulder County, Colo.) are outstanding. No. 2 has thousands of 
birds on it, but, alas, they're distant, and the heat waves were bad. If 
somebody has access to that site, that somebody will surely find a rare bird or 
three there. No. 1 has just a few dozen birds, but they're quite easily viewed; 
we saw, among other things, 4 Pectoral Sandpipers and a tu-tu-tu-ing 
Short-billed Dowitcher. (FYI, No. 2 is a mile or so east of the ranch; No. 1, a 
couple of miles west.)

Finally, I note that Cheyenne has been invaded of late by Mississippi Kites. 
Might not be a bad idea for northern Front Range Coloradans to be on the 
lookout in the days ahead for "Mickies."

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

                                          

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