If you read this listserv for birds currently being seen, the
Black-throated Gray Warbler and with numerous other regular migrants were
at the Wellington SWA just north of Cobb Lake this afternoon.  The songbird
diversity wasn't as high as yesterday, but the numbers were still pretty
good.  Later in the evening I met up with Sean Walters and we walked to the
north side of Timnath Reservoir finding 15 shorebird species including a
calling Short-billed Dowitcher, 2 Black-bellied Plovers, 3 Red-necked
Phalaropes, and hundreds of peeps.  I also counted 4 Black Terns, which
have been scarce here this year.  The guy at the park told us we could walk
around the reservoir as long as we stayed below the high water line.  The
town has been very generous to let birders continue to visit this site,
which is closed to everyone else who is not a Timnath resident.

For those interested in cumulative county lists, there may be a change in
the highest county list now that the CBRC appears to be back from
vacation.  Since 2014, around the time Team BrachyRAMphus formed
(coincidence?), Larimer has had a several new, photographed additions.
September 2014 was a good month with White Ibis in Loveland, Parasitic
Jaeger in Timnath, and Smith's Longspur in Rocky Mountain National Park.
In 2015, the additions of Canyon Towhee (above Fort Collins in May) and
Baird's Sparrow (Buckeye in July) led Team BrachyRAMphus to look for more
county additions.  We found a few species that had either been accepted by
the CBRC (Arctic Tern, Curve-billed Thrasher) or did not require acceptance
but still had photos (Rufous-crowned Sparrow, Red-throated Loon) that were
not on the official list.  Talking to local birders, we were only able to
dig up photos (which were published in the CFO Journal) of a Black Phoebe
in Fort Collins by Dave Leatherman in May 1995.  We also learned of reports
without known photos of Pomarine Jaeger (Douglas Reservoir, Nov 1996,
possible photos), Prairie Warbler (Lake Estes, 2005?, possible photos),
Yellow Rail (possible specimen), and Little Gull (Sep 2015, Loveland, no
photos) which either have or have the potential to have written
descriptions.  We also checked the literature and found that Whooping Crane
was historically on the Larimer County list (reports from 1886 & 87 I
think), but since they have become rare in the state some documentation
would likely be required to add this species to the list again.  Our best
find came after digging through online museum databases. During the process
we learned many scientific names, that some specimens can't be found
(Mottled Duck/hybrid) or skeletonized (Black Phoebe), and the Screech Owl
split caused confusion with our local maxwelliae subspecies (Rocky Mountain
Screech-Owl) put in the Western Screech-Owl group by some museums by
accident.  When searching databases finally went right, we came upon an
entry of Histrionicus histrionicus (I didn't have to Google that one!) from
Estes Park in 1901.  After a few emails to the Royal Ontario Museum, we
were looking at photos of a Harlequin Duck from Larimer.  Currently the
official Larimer County list sits at 413 and if all 7 of the photographed
additions are accepted, then the official list would get bumped up to at
least 420 depending on whether some sight reports are accepted.


Good Birding!
Andy Bankert
Fort Collins, CO

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