Park County, that is. Cloudy, but a good birding day. I focused on the Lake
George Region in the southeastern part of the county and the large
reservoirs of South Park, with the afternoon birding shortened by rain
showers. Some of the breeding migrants are back or pushing through.
Broad-tailed Hummers, various swallows, Chipping and Vesper Sparrows have
been back for a while, and are now joined by Mourning Dove, Dusky
Flycatcher, Plumbeous Vireo, House Wren, Ruby-crowned Kinglet, Hermit
Thrush, Audubon's Warbler, Western Tanager, Black-headed Grosbeak and more.
Just the overture, so far.

County Road 94 and Pike NF Road 200 had a calling *Band-tailed Pigeon* (my
1st in Park this season), *Townsend's Warbler*, *Bushtit *(2), *Northern
Pygmy-Owl*, *Evening Grosbeak* (3) and a pile of *Red Crossbills*. Suffice
it to say that Red Crossbill remains numerous in the Ponderosa forests of
this region of the county, and there is a new cone crop opening. Today I
had only Type 2 birds, I think the first visit I've had only Type 2 birds
since last summer.

I stopped along the South Platte just below Lake George at the Hwy 24
crossing and was delighted with a male *Bobolink*, a county first for me.
This area also had some *Bank Swallows*, a species that seems to be a local
spring migrant in the county with this spot and the adjacent lake maybe the
best spots. Also uncommon here were a *Western Kingbird* (relatively sparse
migrant in Park) and a *Loggerhead Shrike *(one of two this day). Lake
George itself (the lake, not the town) had a decent cross section of
waterfowl, plus 3 *Great-tailed Grackles*, 4 *Sora* and 3 *Virginia Rails*
(all three are local Park spp.). 2 *Hooded Mergansers* were late, and
2 *Franklin's
Gulls *were the only ones I saw this day. Two *White-crowned Sparrows*
included one Gambel's and 1 Mountain (the latter my first this
season). 3 *Common
Yellowthroats *were also a local specialty for Park.

CR 61 had an unexpected *American Three-toed Woodpecker*. This was the
first I've had in that vicinity, but I noticed there were many snags in the
forest. Another *Northern Pygmy-Owl* was at a very reliable spot.

CR 98 had 10 *Evening Grosbeaks*, a *Northern Goshawk*, and 2 *Gray Jays*
(my first along that road). Plamann Reservoir had a *Forster's Tern*,
6 *Western
Grebes* and a handful of duck species.

Approaching Eleven Mile Reservoir on CR 59 I spied a *Solitary Sandpiper*
in a flooded section of field.

The best highlight at Eleven Mile was a flock of 46 *Black Terns*! They
were feeding low over the water with a large number of mixed swallows
swallows, surely catching insects of some sort. I never once saw one dive
to the water. The nesting island in the south part of the reservoir had its
nesting *California Gulls* (many nests) and *Double-crested  Cormorants *(at
least 61 nests). I saw *Great Blue Herons* there, but could not spot any
nests; distance may have been a factor. Numbers of these species at this
lake were 1400+ *California Gulls*, 173 *DC Cormorants*, and 4 *GB Herons*.
Shorebirds were scarce. Best was 3 *Least Sandpipers*. A *Great Egret* on
the nesting island was good for Park. An *Osprey* flew over. A *Sage
Thrasher* was at Witcher Cove campground, and a *Canyon Wren* was calling
out of place on a rock slope near Cross Creek campground. A *Bald Eagle*
flew over.

Birding at Spinney Reservoir was not too exciting. The only highlight
was 3 *Common
Loons*. A saline pond along CR 59 north of Spinney had a *Semipalmated
Plover*. The same pond had a hybrid *Mallard x Gadwall*. A flooded field
nearby had another *Solitary Sandpiper*. The CR 59 crossing of the South
Fork of the South Platte had an *Eastern Kingbird* (one I rarely find in
Park), and a *Yellow Warbler* and *Lincoln's Sparrow*. A *Clay-colored
Sparrow* here was just the third I've seen in Park (two in May, 1 in Sept).

At Antero Reservoir I only viewed from the south side with rain arguing
against a visit to the north side. (** see below for a note on closure)/
There was lots of shore, but a disappointing showing of shorebirds (6
species). Still, a *Black-necked Stilt *was a good bird for Park. An
immature *Snow Goose* on the island southeast of the south boat launch
provided a good May record for the county. There were 12 *Forster's Terns*
that I could identify and 5 other terns that were likely this species. And
one *Bonaparte's Gull*.

For the record, here is a run down on waterfowl totals from the main water
sites I visited (Lake Geo., Plamann, Eleven Mile, Spinney, Antero, and
Buffalo Creek Res.): 1 Snow Goose, 233 Canada Goose, 701 Gadwall, 3 Am.
Wigeon, 44 Mallard, 6 Blue-winged Teal, 15 Cinnamon, 104 Nor. Shoveler, 194
Green-winged Teal, 16 Redhead, 2 Ring-necked Duck, 109 Lesser Scaup, 122
Bufflehead, 3 Comon Goldeneye, 11 Common Merganser, 2 Hooded Merganser, and
252 Ruddy ducks. Plus another 200 unidentified ducks.

And a few other totals: 268 Eared Grebes, 234 Am. White Pelicans, 68 Am.
Avocets and 71 Wilson's Phalaropes.

Lastly, Antero Reservoir will be closing to all access on June 1 due to a
dam rehabilitation project. There is no end date advertised on the signs
there, but I'd guess the closure will extend through the fall at least.

David Suddjian
Littleton, CO

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