I had an amazing day at Elbert County yesterday May 5. Weather was
fantastic (mostly calm and sunny or partly cloudy), and I think the timing
after the recent snow storm and days of rain was fortuitous. There was
water everywhere out there. Ponds, ponds and more ponds (most without any
birds, though), flowing streams, flooded roads. It was an embarrassment of
aquatic riches for Elbert. Frogs were happy.

I think I had about 150 species for the day, and that is with a relatively
short supply of shorebirds. I found 15 species of warblers and some other
really good birds. I made nearly 80 stops, beginning early in pine forest
near Elizabeth and then spending most of the day in the northeast part of
the county. I found that areas of creeks that had very recently had high
flow with obstructions near road crossings catching flotsom and debris were
especially good for some of the rare migrants. Apparently the flotsom
provided for good foraging conditions. For the sake of brevity I'm going to
hit just the highlights.

The block of pine forest just east of Elizabeth still has *Cassin's Finches*.
I found 5, including 4 singing males and 1 female type that seemed to be
fiddling with possible nesting material. A male and female *Evening
Grosbeak* flying over at Down West Ride were a big surprise in May! Also
had a late *Townsend's Solitaire* (Casey Jones Park), *Townsend's Warbler*
(Down West Ride at Darting Bird Lane), *Dusky Flycatcher*, *Plumbeous Vireo*,
and other migrants that like pine forest. Lots of *Red Crossbills*.

A *White-throated Sparrow *was at Freese Road. A *Red-eyed Vireo* was along
CR 73 in the Freese area at a tributary of West Bijou Creek. When I first
saw it, it was down in some rabbit brush (!) with migrant Clay-colored
Sparrows and Yellow Warblers

Ball Reservoir had an alternate plumaged *Black Tern*, 2 *Common Mergansers*,
3 *Willets*, *Western Grebes*, *Franklin's*, *California* and
*Ring-billed *gulls.
The very full conditions precluded most shorebirds.

East Bijou Creek had a *Chestnut-sided Warbler* near CR 125. The crossing
at CR 117 had a *Yellow-breasted Chat*, *Gray Catbird*, *MacGillivray's
Warbler*, and *Dusky Flycatcher*. The crossing at CR 162 had a *Least
Flycatcher*, *Dusky Flycatcher*, *American Redstart *and *Indigo Bunting*.
The area near the crossing of CR 170 had a male *Mourning Warbler *(crippling
views), *Field Sparrow*, 2 *American Redstarts*, 2 *Northern Waterthrushes*,
*Nashville Warbler*, *Orchard Oriole*, 3 *Wilson's Warblers*, *Broad-winged
Hawk *fly-over, and 3 *Dusky Flycatchers*. Funny thing about this last
spot. At first there did not seem to be anything out of the ordinary, then
all of a sudden birds began to appear, as if things were moving in and out.
Some stayed for several nice views, while others appeared once and I did
not see them again.

Big Sandy Creek near CR 118 had a male (!) *Painted Bunting*, *Northern
Waterthrush*, *Marsh Wren*, and *Dusky Flycatcher*. Same stream near
Matheson had a *Northern Waterthrush*, while 2 *Chimney Swifts* were over
the town area itself. Big Sandy near Simla had a *Gray-cheeked Thrush* (and
*Swainson's*),* Black-and-white Warbler*, and *American Redstart*.

I found a male *Virginia's Warbler* in some juniper habitat at Cedar Point,
southeast of Agate.

A *Whimbrel* was standing in a field at the south end of CR 153, with *McCown's
Longspur* nearby, and a *Blackpoll Warbler* at a tree grove further north
along CR 153.

Tons of kingbirds (tallies from just my stops were 290 *Western*, 44
*Cassin's* and 12 *Eastern*), carpets of sparrows and scads of *Lark
Buntings*, of course.

Two non-bird sightings of interest for me were a *Tiger Salamander *crossing
CR 153 and a *Porcupine* along Big Sandy Creek near Matheson.

I'm probably forgetting something...

David Suddjian
Littleton, CO

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