Cobirders, 
if you want the bird list and related description, skip the next paragraph. I 
was feeling literary :-). 
I visited Boyd Lake State Park near Loveland late this afternoon. Water was 
high, boaters and jet skiers abounded, and birds seemed non-existent in the 
heat of the afternoon. After about a half hour of the birding doldrums, I was 
about to leave but decided to check out the north parking lot, where I had seen 
exposed shoreline earlier this summer. Approaching the lot, I caught movement 
out of the corner of my eye in the line of trees that line the property border 
here, west of the parking lot. After parking, I walked along those trees and 
discovered a nice flock of migrating land birds, including 4 species of 
warblers and a FOS Green-tailed Towhee. As I returned to my car, the view of 
the lake provided some jet-skiing action and various types of boats, but seemed 
devoid of birds. Again I was about to leave when a flash of white caught my eye 
- TERNS! I walked to the water's edge to view the two terns better and was 
pleased to discover they were Common Terns, a species I rarely see in Larimer 
County (although this spring was a notable exception as quite a few were 
around, especially at Boyd Lake). From the water's edge I could see the marshy 
north end of the lake and realized that there were many waterbirds there, north 
of the line of buoys keeping boats out of the shallows. I went to retrieve my 
telescope and camera and when I returned, I discovered the terns were 
multiplying. Two became four, four became eight, and eventually (90 min later) 
I ended with a count of 16. Perhaps there were more! 
  
The list: 
Forster's Tern - 7 
Common Tern - 2 
Arctic Tern - 4 
Unidentified Tern - 3 
The full list is here: http://ebird.org/ebird/view/checklist?subID=S19834955 . 
  
A comment about the Arctic Terns: I spent a good twenty minutes studying one 
actively feeding tern that was noticeably smaller than the Forster's, very pale 
(like the Forster's), short necked, with partial black cap and pale gray carpal 
bar. I eventually convinced myself that it was an Arctic. Eventually, after 
sunset, there were 4 of these flying around, with a style reminiscent of 
Bonaparte's Gull (in part, due to the short neck effect). If you asked me if 
seeing a flock of Arctic Terns in Colorado was possible, I would have said, 
"No", until tonight. I still don't believe it and plan on returning at daybreak 
to document this with better views, photographs, etc. I hope others will as 
well (let me know if you get a photo). 
  
If you plan to visit Boyd Lake, there is a map of the location attached to the 
ebird link above. I suggest viewing from the east side in the morning, or west 
side (fee area) in the afternoon for best lighting. Terns were feeding off the 
north lot, but I suspect the roost is in the emergent vegetation at the 
southeast end. The roost area can be scoped from a public road on the east 
side. Sometimes neighbors will invite birders onto private property for better 
viewing. Otherwise, please do not trespass on private property. 
  
If you are interested in joining forces for a couple hours in the morning or 
evening, email me privately. 

Nick Komar 
Fort Collins CO 

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