Did you know that in addition to annual conventions, CFO sponsors occasional 
special field trips for CFO members?  See 
http://cobirds.org/CFO/SpecialEvents.aspx for a schedule of these events.

This past weekend, July 9th and 10th, three cars-full of CFO birders headed to 
the northwest corner of Colorado for a great two days of Colorado (and even 
some Wyoming) birding.  We started out from Idaho Springs at 7:00 a.m. to 
gather before heading over Berthoud Pass with a first stop at Windy Gap 
Reservoir where one of the most unusual species for the trip (and mid-July) was 
a 2nd summer male Common Goldeneye.  We birded the roadside in Hot Sulphur 
Springs to check out hummingbird feeders at a couple of local restaurants along 
US-40 before departing for one of my favorite spots in Grand County, Williams 
Fork Reservoir.  The willowy areas at the east end (upstream) were full of bird 
life including singing Veery and Fox Sparrow along with Gray Catbird, Warbling 
Vireo, Song Sparrow, Bullock's Oriole, Black-headed Grosbeak and more.  Along 
the south shore of William's Fork in the grassy marshes there were Wilson's 
Snipe, Savannah Sparrow, Sora and a single Long-billed Curlew.

We had lunch in a park in Kremmling with a Red-naped Sapsucker before 
continuing to the Rabbit Ears Pass area where we established a new eBird 
hotspot at Dumont Lake.  As the afternoon wore on and got increasingly hot, we 
saw several Sandhill Cranes along the Yampa river from Steamboat Springs to 
Hayden before making it to Craig for the evening.

Sunday saw us head out and made it through a one-way traffic road project on CO 
13 north of Craig to get to Moffat County Road 27 heading up into the Elkhead 
Mountains.  This is a wonderful route gradually rising from scrub oak (where 
all present had a life bird-Woodhouse's Scrub Jay) through aspen to fir/spruce 
highlands.  We found everything from Indigo Bunting to Gray Jay along the 
route.  Continuing north, we entered Wyoming to head back along State Route 
70-a beautiful road, but one that failed to produce the hoped for Wyoming 
rarities that have been reported in the past.

Because of fire, we decided to return to the Front Range via Laramie, which 
allowed us to visit Hutton Lake NWR.  That was a great choice because even at 
the end of the day in 90 degree Hutton gave us lots of ducks, shorebirds and 
sparrows as well as McCown's Longspur.

Overall as a group, we tallied about 120 species on the trip.  To investigate 
particulars, visit eBird for lists at some of the hotspots mentioned.

Bill Kaempfer
Boulder

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