The Townsend's Warbler and Rose-breasted Grosbeaks continued at my yard
early this morning, but were not evident late in the day.

I was out early in the snow storm and witnessed a large movement of
American Robins coming down from the mountains at Deer Creek Canyon Park
and South Valley Park and vicinity, along with Townsend's Solitaires. The
robins were heading east at rates of 75-100 per minute wherever I looked in
the first 2 hours after sunrise, totalling into the many 1000s.
Consequently large numbers had moved into Chatfield and other areas where
they were previously spread out in far lower numbers of nesting pairs.
There were much lesser numbers of solitaires, but I saw over 50 flying east
early on and encountered small numbers at many spots in the Chatfield,
Hildebrand and South Valley areas where they had already departed for the
spring. Clearly these birds were trying to find somewhere with available
food. I imagine that as conditions improve they will return to territories
already established, along with the big influx of Mountain and Western
bluebirds (and probably lots of the Yellow-rumpeds are also mountain
refugees). I wonder how that sorts out among neighbors...abandoning
territories and then returning.

All the big numbers of sparrows and Lark Buntings continue, as others have
noted, so I won't mention them further, except to say that my Chipping
tally for the day was well over 1000 individuals, and several hundred each
of Vesper, Brewer's and Clay-colored,

Deer Creek at Hildebrand Ranch was very exciting, although birding
conditions ranged from almost reasonable to rather challenging, depending
on the rate of snow fall and wind. Despite the snow, or probably because of
it, in addition to the flow of robins coming down the drainage from the
mountains, there were huge numbers of warblers, and just scads of sparrows
moving. Also flycatchers, vireos, thrushes and gnatcatchers. I found many
species, but there were several calls I could not ID, and the birds seldom
sat still for long. When I returned later in the day, after the storm
broke, there were very few warblers and others. It seemed like they had
dispersed. It was a remarkable change!!

But here were the highlights from about 1.2 miles of Deer Creek in the
blowing snow early in the day: 1 Ferruginous Hawk, 1 Olive-sided
Flycatcher, 13 Willow Flycatchers, 2 Hammond's Flycatchers, 1 Dusky, 2
Cordilleran, 1 Least, 1 Eastern Phoebe, 1 Cassin's Kingbird, 1
Yellow-throated Vireo, 2 Cassin's Vireos, 3 Plumbeous Vireos, 52 Blue-gray
Gnatcatchers (likely moved down from upslope to W), 1 Veery, 18 Hermit
Thrush, 14 Swainson's Thrush, 56 Virginia's Warblers (likely down slope
movers), 1 Nashville Warbler, 450+ Yellow-rumped Warblers, 1
Black-and-white Warbler, 1 Ovenbird, 2 American Redstarts, 1
Yellow-breasted Chat (plus Yellow, Wilson's, MacGillivray's), 1 Summer
Tanager, and 1 Orchard Oriole! And a few that got away...

I was happy to find the one Cassin's Kingbird at Hildebrand, but apparently
thee was a significant movement and fallout, as I hit the Cassin's jackpot
at Chatfield. There I encountered 3 at Kingfisher Parking Lot, 14(!) along
the road to Plum Creek Nature Area, and 4 more at the entry road to Massey
Draw. The road to Plum Creek was just loaded with kingbirds when I drove
out, including a whopping 340+/- Western Kingbirds and 47 Eastern Kingbirds
parked on the road. But when I drove back through an hour later numbers
were down by 70%. The big numbers were there when it was still snowing,
then only lesser numbers after the snow quit.

Other birds of note at Chatfield: Northern Parula, Hooded Warbler, Northern
Waterthrush, Blackpoll Warbler, 1 Common Tern, 2 Forster's Terns (both tern
species at a small pond west of Plum Creek).

On the theme of changing bird numbers with the cessation of the storm, I
noticed that as the day went on, sparrows and other roadside species
diminished markedly after the snow quit. I think many began to disperse as
soon as they could. To be sure there were still many lingering in the
afternoon, but numbers definitely dropped markedly.

Lastly, some brief views from the west side of Marston had 13 pretty
Black-belled Plovers, 1 Solitary, and some Leasts.

David Suddjian
Littleton, CO

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Colorado Birds" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To post to this group, send email to [email protected].
To view this discussion on the web visit 
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/cobirds/CAGj6RoqCmOUELv-T3xfvvS2i-95wg6GSoe4EjmY8Gm3SbZSkMQ%40mail.gmail.com.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to