Greetings All

Yesterday, Nick Moore and I wandered about much of western/central Weld County.
The weather, was suboptimal but not too intrusive
The Pawnee had, gasp!, very very little snow on the ground, so larks and such 
were not pushed to roadsides. We did still have a couple nice (20-50 birds) 
sized flocks of Lapland Longs, but mostly as flybys/flyovers


Because of the exceptionally cold dawn temps, we put off trying to bird water 
spots until about 10 am; before then, there was too much fog rising from the 
unfrozen water into the near-zero degree air.


Almost all water had thawed before the recent cold snap, so only smaller ponds 
(e.g., Stewarts' Pond) were frozen. 


The S Weld Landfill remains gull-less for reasons unclear, as there were gulls 
at Black Hollow Res (but these could not be well seen due to snow, and the 
place is already rapidly freezing.) Drake Lake is mostly frozen, but had a nice 
little group of gulls and geese


Windsor Res was ice-free and strangely bird-free
Windsor Lake had a couple THAYER's GULL and the LONG-TAILED DUCK remained at 
the east end, with a goodly group of Common Goldeneye
Neff Lake was nearly frozen and utterly bird less
Seeley Res had a nice variety of birds, including a female BUFFLEHEAD x COMMON 
GOLDENEYE
Angel Lake was open and stuffed full of Mallards and Cackling/Canada Geese as 
were the surrounding fields.
Woods Lake had fabulous numbers of gulls and geese but little of interest. 
1000+ RB Gulls and not a single Herring or other gull. Among the 3000+ geese, 
only 2 Snow Geese added interest and not a single hybrid (in the past, this 
many geese at Woods would've had a dozen or more white geese and several 
hybrids. There were two AM WHITE PELICANS on the south shore. 
The Lower Latham are was mostly frozen, excepting L Latham Res itself, which 
had surprisingly few birds. The little stream that enters the s. side of L 
Latham Res did have an AMERICAN PIPIT. Given that I had one recently along the 
St Vrain in Longmont, I wonder if pipits are actually starting to migrate, 
albeit in small numbers


Lastly, where the S Platte crosses CO-66 just outside of Platteville, there was 
a GREATER YELLOWLEGS.


Good Birding
Steve Mlodinow
Longmont 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/14bcb5c7824-6318-7adf%40webprd-a66.mail.aol.com.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to