I began at the southeast corner of the county visiting a spot along
Fourmile Creek off CR 102 that I had not been to before. It looked
interesting on the Google Earth image and I could see a parking area along
CR 102 with a trail leading down along the creek. Indeed there is a parking
area (about 0.5 mile west of the Teller Co line), but no signage about the
place. But reading the fine print on some signs posting access rules gave
the name of "Guffey Gorge." It is a small gorge, but had some birds that
are good for Park, and was a very pretty place to explore. There are good
sized rock walls, nice willows and rushing creek habitat, and even a patch
of Gambel oaks, which are generally pretty limited in Park Co. Unlike the
main area of this tree's occurrence in Park on the slopes south of Guffey
itself, where the oaks are essentially large shrubs, the patch in Guffey
Gorge had attained tree size. *Spotted Towhee*, essentially restricted to
areas with oaks in Park, was here, represented by a female and juvenile. A
male *Virginia's Warbler*, also mostly associated with the oaks in its
small Park distribution, was also present. A family of *Canyon Wrens* was
still in its nest in a rock crevice overlooking the stream, with another
singer downstream. A *Lazuli Bunting* and 2 *Gray Catbirds* were in the
willows, an *Am. Dipper* along the stream, and 2 *White-throated Swifts *flew
over. The latter species is not easy to find in Park away from Eleven Mile
Canyon.

A *Grasshopper Sparrow* (likely migrant) was nearby at CR 71 x CR 102.
Further up CR 71 and its spur Doe Valley road I heard some *Pinyon Jays*,
and Type 2 *Red Crossbills* were fairly common in this region of the county
and a new Ponderosa cone crop is coming on strong. A male *Evening Grosbeak*
was along CR 100, and several attending a feeding station at Plamann Lake
included some fresh juvies.

Nesting activity on the island off Witcher Cove at Eleven Mile Reservoir
had concluded, with a dramatic change in *California Gull *numbers (total
of about 60 on 8/3 vs. an estimate of 3,500 adults and young with nesting
going full bore on 7/1). In contrast, *Western Grebes* were still sitting
on nests on veg mat off the Platte inlet. Birds of some note at Eleven Mile
reservoir were 1 *Osprey*, 1 *Snowy Egret *(good in Park), 1 *Greater
Yellowlegs*, 2 *Willets*, 2 *Wilson's Phalaropes*, 13+ *White-faced Ibis*,
3 summering *Northern Pintails*, and a small *tern* (likely Forster's, but
too far away). A juv. *Ferruginous Hawk* along CR 59 near the mid-section
of the reservoir was just my third sighting in Park Co this nesting
season.  Spinney Mountain Reservoir was dullsville.

A *Lark Bunting* along CR 59 north of Spinney Mountain Res. was my second
encounter with that species since I began birding Park.

Stops at three productive ponds in the great Hartsel - Fairplay - Jefferson
region had a nice cross section of ducks, including a number of new broods.
Most ducks other than Mallards seem to hatch fairly late in the season in
Park (like late July onwards). A summering *Common Goldeneye* was the most
notable among the suite of species. *Sora* is presently fairly frequent at
ponds in Park with marshy margins.

A male *Black-chinned Hummingbird *was along the North Fork of the South
Platte at the Rocky Mountain Specialty Pack String Station -- my 2nd for
Park Co.

Migrant landbirds encountered during the day included many *Chipping
Sparrows*, *Sage Thrashers* fairly common away from the county's limited
nesting range, numerous *Lark Sparrows*, and 2 *Brewer's Sparrows* away
from nesting habitat. *Turkey Vultures* were widespread and included some
kettles of clear migrants. One group at Jefferson had 38 vultures.

David Suddjian
Littleton, CO

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