Hello, Birders.

It's an annual tradition for (some of the zanier of) us in Colorado: We 
assemble early, extremely early, on the morning of Tuesday, Aug. 12, the 
peak morning for the Perseid meteor shower and the peak time of year for 
night migration by Colorado's birds. A full description of the trip, from 
the CFO's journal *Colorado Birds*, is appended below.

Here are the basics. We meet at 2:45 a.m. sharp at an undisclosed location 
in eastern Boulder County. Immediately we proceed on foot a short distance 
to another undisclosed location. There we listen for birds and watch for 
meteors. This outing is free and open to the public. Young people, 
non-birders, and general curiosity-seekers welcome. *RSVP required. Please 
email me* (tedfloyd57 #at# hotmail ^dot^ com), and let me know that you 
will be participating. I'll get right back in touch w/you about where to 
meet, and some other details.

See below for a fuller description of this outing.

Ted Floyd
Lafayette, Boulder County, Colorado

*CFO Birding Skills Workshop*

*With CFO Director Ted Floyd*

 

*Meteors, Molt Migration, and More*

 

Join CFO director Ted Floyd for a zany and educational experience on the 
“morning” of Tuesday, August 12, 2014. We will assemble at 2:45 a.m. (that 
is not a typo) at an undisclosed location in eastern Boulder County, then 
walk a very short distance to a secret and magical spot for pondering 
astronomy, ornithology, and the meaning of life.

If skies are clear, we will watch the Perseid meteor shower, considered by 
many to be the greatest celestial event of the year. The best time to study 
the Perseids is right before dawn on the morning of August 12. (By the way, 
August 12, 2014 is the 30th anniversary of one the most famous brawls in 
the history of Major League Baseball.)

We will listen for and learn to recognize the flight calls of nocturnal 
migrants: Chipping Sparrows, Brewer’s Sparrows, Yellow Warblers, Lark 
Buntings, and maybe even an Upland Sandpiper. Many of these birds are 
engaged in a fascinating nocturnal “molt migration,” and we’ll learn about 
that while we’re out there.

More: We may see hoary bats and big brown bats (they’re usually around) and 
the Galaxy in Andromeda (it ain’t goin’ anywhere), we should hear coyotes 
and night-singing *Aechmophorus* grebes, and encounters at that time of 
“day” with humans are always interesting.

Around sunrise, we’ll grab a bite to eat. Bring your own biscuits and 
gravy, or get some on the go. Then we’ll visit a local reservoir—wherever 
viewing conditions are good—and talk more about molt (which, by this time 
of day, we’ll actually be able to *see*), migration, and flight calls.

We expect to wrap up around 9am.

 

*All persons are welcome.* This trip is suitable for persons of all 
interest levels and skill levels. We’ll walk a short distance from the cars 
to the secret viewing and listening place; it’s less than a mile round-trip.

 

*RSVP REQUIRED. Please email Ted Floyd (tedfloyd57 #at# hotmail ^dot^ com) 
for further details. Please use a clear and direct subject line, like 
AUGUST 12 CFO FIELD WORKSHOP.*


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