I dove in head-first for the end of the Christmas Bird Count season with three 
counts over the last weekend of the season in Flagler, Crook and at Barr Lake 
on Friday, Saturday and Sunday of this past weekend.

On Friday I went out to Flagler, only 90 minutes east of the Denver area on 
I-70 for the 4th count out there.  Previously Flagler has registered a national 
high for Lapland Longspur and a 2nd place in Horned Lark, but this was a tough 
year.  First it was just plain frozen out there resulting in zero birds 
associated with water; not only no ducks or geese, but no heron, kingfisher, 
snipe, marsh wren...you get the story.  If you are a bird that needs open water 
of any type, there was no point staying around the Flagler area.  Second, I 
just couldn't wrangle many birders out there-my thanks to Doug Kibbe, Bill 
Killam and Gwen Moore for signing on, but two parties covering a whole count 
circle leaves a lot of territory on the table.  Still we managed to find 33 
species (take out all of the water-associated birds on other plains counts, and 
you would be at the same level).  This remains a good place to find 
longspurs-we had dozens of Laplands and one Chestnut-collared on the count.

Gwen Moore and I continued on up to Sterling to enjoy the Crook CBC on 
Saturday.  This is a spectacular count circle encompassing Jumbo Reservoir plus 
Red Lion, Tamarack Ranch and Duck Creek SWAs.  The block I work for Steve 
Larson on this count is everything east of Logan County Road 93, the Red Lion 
exit road from I-76.  Again it is a lot of territory, and unfortunately, unlike 
Flagler some really nasty weather loomed ahead. On the other hand, like Flagler 
there was a lot of frozen water out there.

A first stop at the WCR 93 bridge over the Platte failed to get any Eastern 
Screech Owls to respond, but there were pairs of Great Horned Owls calling in 
three different directions.  From this point we back-tracked to I-76 where 
right at the entrance ramp it is possible to view one of the recharge ponds 
that attract ducks no matter how cold.  Water is pumped from the Platte in 
Tamarack Ranch SWA to these ponds about 1 or 2 miles from the river to slowly 
enter the ground water system and return to the river.  This creates a series 
of water features that, due to the pumped-in water, remain open even when the 
temperature falls below 0F, as had been the case for several days.  The pond 
attracted more than a thousand Snow Geese with a few Ross's filling in, many 
white-cheeked geese, several thousand Mallards plus a handful Northern Pintail 
and Common Goldeneyes.

All of Jumbo Reservoir was frozen solid, but a few seeps below the various 
Jumbo dams had open water and Marsh Wrens.  We managed to find a Harris's 
Sparrow along Sedgwick County Road 3 south of US 138 plus Red-bellied 
Woodpeckers, as expected at the south end of both SCR 1 and 3.  Perhaps the 
most exciting birding was along the hedgerow lining SCR 1 (County Line Road) 
just south of Jumbo Reservoir.  We were able to find at least 5 Long-eared Owls 
and a Short-eared Owl in this sometimes good and other times not so good roost.

At 11:00 the weather started turning bad, and the whole group-8 birders in 3 
groups-headed for home shortly after noon.

Sunday, I made the much shorter 35 minute trip out to Brighton for my block on 
the Barr Lake CBC.  This is a block that I first worked with Colorado birding 
legend, Bob Jickling, in the early 1980s, and boy has it changed physically 
since then!  Not only are there housing developments where there didn't use to 
be, there are industrial areas, lakes, streams...just about everything has 
changed in that period of time except for the birding potential.

The weather conditions still weren't much different than in Flagler and 
Crook-it was and had been very cold.  I started the day with -10F on my car 
thermometer.  Shortly thereafter, joined by Pam Piombino and David Dowell we 
began to cut through the dense fog along the Platte.  Unlike the previous two 
days, the cold in Brighton managed to bring all the birds into the effluent 
warmed river.  We had quite a collection of ducks-13 species in total-on the 
river, plus lots of Killdeer, Wilson's Snipe and American Pipits.  But best was 
at the Brighton sewage treatment plant where warm water and insect life held 3 
Yellow-rumped Warblers and the first ever Say's Phoebe for the Barr Lake count.

The other really good stop for the block was in the Brighton Cemetery.  We all 
commented that this spot had been a dud in the past even though it rated as 
both an eBird Hotspot and a CFO County Birding site.  On Sunday it lived up to 
its reputation and we logged about a dozen Red-breasted Nuthatches, 5 Brown 
Creepers and 3 Mountain Chickadees.  This helped us out to a block total of 60 
species for the day.

And so, another CBC season came to an end.  I made it out to 7 different counts 
this year.  This was down 3 over the past couple of years because I was out of 
town for a week and because the Sunday start to the count period jammed things 
up a bit.  My overall impression, however, was that there were few counters out 
this season.  I hope that is just an aberration, and all of you make it out for 
multiple CBCs next year.

Bill Kaempfer
President CFO
Boulder

-- 
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/F90B1155A81D474890D22EEFFFA7CAE524653F882D%40EXC4.ad.colorado.edu.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to