Went to Crow Valley today with Nina Routh.  We didn't get there until 10:30am 
and birded until 3.  Birdy enough to be interesting for the first part, with 
lot of newly arrived Wilson's Warblers and Chipping Sparrows.  While eating 
lunch at the main picnic shelter, Joe Mammoser walked up and said he had just 
seen a Blue-headed Vireo about 20 yards beyond the point where Nina and I broke 
off the loop for some food.  Grateful for the intel, we finished eating and 
headed over to the area in the northwest corner of the campground.  If you walk 
east from the group area you come to a point where the trail heads north to the 
pond with the Russian-olive overtopping it and the gate to the Mourning Dove 
Trail/dispersed camping.  Right where the trail just east of the Group Area 
heads north is a grove of Siberian elms.  In the channel of Crow Creek is a 
remnant puddle of water.  The vireo was here working a fairly wide circle of 
the elms getting that favorite of "solitary" vireos, adult rough stink bugs 
(Brochymena sp.).  I even saw the vireo eat an egg cluster of rough stink 
bug.See July 2014 issue of "Colorado Birds" for a discussion of these 
interesting insects.


Also in this same area were the other four vireo species: Plumbeous, Cassin's, 
Red-eyed, and Warbling.  We also had one male Townsend's Warbler, one early 
Yellow-rumped Warbler, several MacGillivray's Warblers (at least 6 along the 
south and west riparian zone) and one Orange-crowned Warbler.  Joe said he had 
a Yellow-breasted Chat.  We had a fair number of empids including Least, Gray 
and Dusky that we could identify.  An Olive-sided Flycatcher and Western 
Wood-Pewee worked dead elm tree tops.  A few Western Tanagers foraged in elms, 
presumably on Elm Leaf Beetle larvae.  In the southwest corner (sw of the 
junipers) we had an early immature White-crowned Sparrow hanging with one 
Clay-colored, or was it the other way around?  No thrushes.  No solitaires.  No 
sapsuckers or Red-headed.


Not a ton of diversity (only 29 species or so) but some keepers.  Vireos are 
underrated.  We thank Joe for coming over to tell us about the Blue-headed.


The campground was beginning to fill up but was not crazy busy (yet).


Dave Leatherman

Fort Collins

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