I headed out on Friday afternoon to Lamar in order to do some scouting for my 
trips in 10 days at the CFO Convention in Lamar.  While migration was still a 
bit early, and conditions were unpleasantly windy, especially on Saturday, I 
found some interesting birds.

On Friday I headed east to the Arriba area and was able to find a couple of 
Mountain Plovers just south of town on 3f about a mile west of Old 63.

I continued on to Schaffer Reservoir in Lincoln County which is one of my 
favorite spots in that county.  There always seems to be water here, and it is 
always chock full of birds.  They are a bit distant, but easily scopeable, 
especially in the afternoon with the sun behind you.  The reservoir is on 
private land, so you must stay on the road.  That means that you may miss some 
stuff and not be able to ID quite everything, but this is still a spot worth a 
visit.  It is on the "old" road that parallels US 287 between Hugo and Kit 
Carson.  (Anyone who was on my SE Colorado field trip last May will remember 
the truly exciting time we had driving through the mud on this road, but that's 
another story.)  In any event, I recorded 42 species at this spot on Friday, 
and a full 1/3 of them required flagging notes on eBird, most because of the 
very large numbers of individuals out there.  While none were eBird first 
observation for Lincoln County (which does have an eBird list of 296, after 
all), Trumpeter Swan and Great Egret were pretty darn good.

Saturday, I headed off to our neighbor to the east, so I can't really report on 
the results on Cobirds (but let me titillate the 20 of you who have signed up 
for my trip to Kansas-I have some really good spots to visit including a 
private home in Garden City that just happens to have a yard list with over 30 
species of Warblers!).  One point of interest, however, the rest stop on US 50 
east of Holly, but in Colorado, is a really nice spot for birding.  I've asked 
Joe Roller to add it as a Colorado eBird Hotspot (and he has complied).

Today I started out at Lamar Community College Woods where at least three 
Northern Cardinals were singing, and a couple of Red-bellied Woodpeckers were 
calling.  Best bird there for me, however, was a White-throated Sparrow.  Lots 
of Yellow-rumps were the only warblers that I found.  From Lamar I headed north 
to Sheridan Lake, which is a lake again.  It was really covered with lots of 
stuff including 42 White-faced Ibis, 21 American Avocets, a flock of Least 
Sandpipers plus a few Baird's, one Western and a Wilson's Phalarope.  Also 
present, 5 Black-crowned Night Herons.  Brandon (the town, not the birder) had 
a Spotted Towhee and a Burrowing Owl, while nearby Sand Creek Massacre NHS 
featured a Rock Wren.

Finally I made my way up to I-70 at Siebert where the water treatment pond area 
had four Snowy Egrets and a Cattle Egret (seemingly a first county record).  I 
also had a Virginia Rail call below the Flagler Dam.

Bill Kaempfer
Boulder

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