Birders,
There are generally two types of Wild Turkey in Colorado. The Merriam's Wild 
Turkey is mostly present in the foothills and mountains. This is the race that 
was probably common in the state pre-European settlement, but which was 
subsequently reduced to almost nil. In the last several decades, there has been 
an active and very successful re-introduction campaign in the state. Merriam's 
are now back in strong numbers in much of their former range in the mountains. 
Rio Grande Wild Turkeys have been released, mostly for sport stock, in the 
Plains. They are now very common along the main river drainages like the South 
Platte in Fort Morgan. It's possible that they were native to the region as 
well, but I'm not completely sure we have enough information from the 1800's to 
establish that for certain. 
In the summer of 2013, Wild Turkeys began to appear in many out of the way 
places in eastern Boulder County. By this I basically mean east of Broadway. 
Throughout the summer, well before the September rains, there were birds seen 
on the CU Campus, Sawhill Ponds, Cure Farm off Valmont and 75th, in downtown 
Niwot, etc. I became familiar with the birds at Cure Farm when the staff 
alerted me to the turkeys' daily habit of eating the ornamental grapes growing 
outside their kitchen window, with the birds sometimes sticking their heads in 
to look for scraps on the counter. 
The appearance of these birds did not coincide with the floods. It is much more 
likely that, like Front Range Bobwhites, Ring-necked Pheasants, and Chukars, 
they were released by some enterprising sportsmen. It is true that they could 
have walked down from the foothills nearby (100's inhabit the foothills 
directly adjacent to Boulder). However, their sudden appearance in what is a 
rather novel habitat compared to what the local Merriam's are used to seems 
suspicious to me, and I think that the lowest common denominator with birds 
like this is Man. 
I continue to see these turkeys along eastern Boulder Creek near 95th St. They 
weathered the floods it seems, which makes sense given that they can fly just 
fine so can spend as much time as they like sitting high up in trees. They are 
also some of the most intelligent of birds, so they can be expected to shelter 
out of harms way. I can also attest to the fact that their habitat in the 
foothills was minimally impacted since they spend relatively little time in 
drainages and prefer the uplands. 

Thanks,
Christian NunesBoulder, CO
P.S. Colorado Parks and Wildlife is always a good source of info on game birds 
like Wild Turkeys: http://cpw.state.co.us/thingstodo/Pages/turkey.aspx
 
Date: Tue, 8 Apr 2014 12:31:44 -0700
From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]
Subject: [cobirds] Wild Turkeys in Ft. Morgan and one in Longmont

Coming back from Kearney, NB this past Sunday (500K Sandhills at least!), we 
passed about a dozen Wild Turkey toms, standing next to Interstate 76 at Ft. 
Morgan (Morgan County). A few had their tails up in full display.
Then, last night, Virginia Dionigi reported to the Foothills Audubon Bird Club 
that she saw a hen turkey at the Arby's on North Main in Longmont the other day!
It was suggested by someone at Bird Club that the flooding last fall displaced 
turkey populations to points further east than they normally live.
Kat Bradley-Bennett, Longmont (Boulder County)




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