Today marked the continuation of the CFO-sponsored trip to NE Colorado.  By 
having a two-day trip with an overnight stay in Sterling, the CFO is able to 
spend more time further east than single day trips heading out from the front 
range are able to do.  On the Sunday portion of our outing, we headed out to 
Crook and Tamarack SWA first before spending some serious time at Jumbo and Red 
Lion SWA.

Our first stop of the day was to visit an eBird hotspot at the overly specific 
spot of Logan County Road 73.7!  Our best spot seemed to be a group of Wild 
Turkey just outside of the unnamed hamlet at 75 and 58 until John Vanderpoel 
picked out a single Upland Sandpiper in the field north of LCR 58  heading east 
toward US 138.  This has always been the most reliable spot for finding Uppies, 
as far as I am concerned.

We continued on to the west section of Tamarack (parking area 1 west of County 
Road 55).  Here I started hearing Bell's Vireo before I even got out of my car. 
 My count was 8 different singing and territorial males asking and answering 
their buzzy questions.

Then we headed east into the main section of Tamarack.  At stop 5 we had 
Red-bellied Woodpeckers and several of our 30+ Red-headed Woodpeckers for the 
day.  When we got to Logan County Road 93 we headed south under I-76 into the 
sandhill-grassland and ag areas along that road.  We had several Grasshopper 
Sparrows and a few Say's Phoebes but none of the things we like to get along 
that road (e.g. Greater Prairie Chicken).  Perhaps it was just too hot.

It turned out that going north along LR 93 was impossible-it is still closed 
crossing the S. Platte.  In order to get to Jumbo, we had to go east on I-76 to 
the Sedgwick exit and proceed back to the west.  Jumbo is developing A+ 
shorebird habitat, especially between the central point on the south shore and 
the first camping area west of the Sedgwick-Logan county line.  Here we had 
large numbers of Least and Baird's Sandpipers and a large handful of Pectorals, 
too.  But even better were the single, striking Black-bellied Plover still 
mainly in breeding plumage and three Sanderlings.  Heading back toward Red Lion 
we were rewarded with several previously un-tallied duck species to pump up our 
day and trip list.  All together the trip list ended at 128 (+/- a few) for our 
efforts.  This will probably equal or surpass the all-time record for this 
field trip that I've been leading since 2000.

Bill Kaempfer
Boulder

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