Hello all,

Mark Szabo and I spent a lovely weekend birding in the San Luis Valley, 
spending most of our time at Monte Vista National Wildlife Refuge (about 14 
hours total) and then had a relatively short 2 hours at Alamosa NWR. Someone on 
Cobirds recently asked if the Sandhill Cranes were still in the valley. I can 
answer with an unequivocal 'Yes!' Monte Vista NWR is filled with stereo 
surround sound of Sandhill Cranes - flying, kettling, foraging, dancing, and 
even napping on occasion. We counted about 4000 Cranes on Saturday and a 
slightly smaller 3000 today (ebird flagged both of those numbers). The Marsh 
Wrens put on amazingly vocal shows- every stop in either refuge was filled with 
Marsh Wren chittering away. In spite of the chattering, they were remarkably 
tolerant and visible while we watched.


At Monte Vista NWR, almost all of the expected ducks were seen along with well 
over 400 Canada Geese: Mallards, Northern Shovelers, Green-winged Teal, 
Northern Pintails, American Wigeons, Redheads, Canvasback (just 1!), Gadwall, 
Ring-necked Duck, Ruddy Duck. We also had one each of Eared, Pied-billed and 
Western Grebes, hundreds of American Coots and 27 Killdeer. Amongst the many 
Red-winged Blackbirds was one lingering Yellow-headed Blackbird. Raptors were 
well-represented with Red-tailed Hawks leading the numbers race, followed by 
Northern Harriers, American Kestrels and a Prairie Falcon.


When we moved on to Alamosa NWR, it was relatively quiet though we did add 2 
Greater Yellowlegs and a Northern Shrike to the weekend list.


In regards to the discussion about ebird vs Cobird posting, I would add the 
following: I bird regularly and often and nearly always put my lists on ebird 
and nearly never post here. I like to contribute to the citizen science efforts 
and don't see my wanderings as particularly exciting or fruitful for discussion 
(as Joey Kellner aptly said for some people, I bird for me and what I get from 
being in nature). I always think that anyone who wants to check out an area 
that I have been can check ebirds for what has been seen lately and they can 
find my specific reports there. However, the one area where Cobirds might serve 
the communication purpose better is with reports/numbers or species that get 
flagged. Those will not show up on the Hotspot list though they are still 
reflected on my personal list. For example, anyone looking at the Monte Vista 
NWR list for the weekend would not initially see any of the following from my 
report because they were all flagged (perhaps the filters are too low in this 
area?):


4000 (or 3000) Sandhill Cranes

400 Canada Geese from Saturday though 563 was okay today (the change to 
November I presume)

8 Song Sparrows

27 Killdeer

1 Yellow-headed Blackbird


Some have since been cleared and added to the list, others have not.


Happy birding to all and to all a good night,

Gloria Nikolai

usually in El Paso County





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