Hi Kevin I have been birding that area for a long time now and it has always 
produced good birds during migration.  The riparian habitat will indeed benefit 
as the city lowered the river bank which was good because this allowed the 
river to re-connect to the flood plain during high flows and create ideal 
cottonwood germination sites.  As you may have noticed there is an old non 
traditional  irrigation ditch on the north side of the natural area which has 
created some good conditions for vegetation to grow along the edges that 
attracts many migrants.
Cheers,Rob SparksOld Town 
Fort Collins

Date: Wed, 20 May 2015 14:09:48 -0700
From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]
Subject: [cobirds] Re: Worm-eating War - yes (Larimer)

In addition to the Worm-eating Warbler, the male Mourning Warbler made an 
appearance after lunch as well. As Sue says, many other great birds are/were 
present too - Blackpoll Warbler, Veery, Ovenbird, White-throated Sparrow, 
Plumbeous Vireo, Red-eyed Vireo, Northern Waterthrush, Broad-winged Hawk. 
Perhaps the rerouting of some of the Poudre River over the new Cottonwood 
plantings has created an excellent spring migrant trap?
Kevin KeirnFort Collins, CO

On Wednesday, May 20, 2015 at 9:55:12 AM UTC-6, sheflew wrote:Birders,



The Worm-eating Warbler was spotted 50 yards west of parking area just along 
stream 2-4 feet off ground. Many other great birds here as well.



Sue Riffe

Lyons, CO



Sent from my iPhone




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