Hopefully it is OK to post to COBIRDS about the Wyoming Hereford Ranch just 
east of Cheyenne, WY off Campstool Road Exit of I-80, as this definitely 
informs events at Crow Valley Campground (Weld) and other point south in CO.  
It is practically a Larimer County Colorado "Annex".


I usually bird the ranch itself, then check the WHR Reservoir #2 to the east 
and then work back west on Campstool Road past the Visitor Entrance Road to WHR 
to the unnamed road that connects Campstool Road (SR209) with S. Industrial 
Road to the west, then follow S. Industrial Road northwest to WHR Reservoir #1. 
 Google WHR and check the map to make sense of this.


At the WHR itself, including the long, cottonwood topped lane leading to the 
visitor check-in bldg (first structure on the left as you come north on the 
entry road, and which has a guestbook and clean restroom), the various barns 
and ranch buildings, and the riparian area along Crow Creek to the north, I had 
40 species, with the best being American Redstart male, Northern Waterthrush, 
Red-eyed Vireo, probable Calliope Hummingbird, a zillion (30+) Wilson's 
Warblers, 3-4 MacGillivray's Warblers, 2 Orange-crowned Warblers, a FOS at low 
elevation Ruby-crowned Kinglet, two "western" Warbling Vireos, Olive-sided 
Flycatcher, Least Flycatcher, 2 Dusky Flycatchers, 2 buntings that were 
probably Lazuli, a heard only grosbeak, Gray Catbird and 5 lingering Yellow 
Warblers.  The habitat looks outstanding and I actually expected a rarity or 
two but it was not to be.  Like Crow Valley Campground, the area has had high 
water earlier in the summer but is OK now.  There is a wonderful boggy area 
just down the bank north of the Sale Barn that seems crafted for a 
Prothonotary, waterthrush (yes, that where the one was), Wood Thrush, 
stub-tailed wren, woodcock or rare Oporornis.  Surprisingly, very few 
mosquitoes.


WHR Reservoir #2 had several common waterfowl species plus Snowy Egret.


The unnamed road connecting Campstool Road with S. Industrial Road had a Blue 
Grosbeak, a few Savannah Sparrows, a few Vesper Sparrows, and about half a 
dozen kingbirds, both Eastern and Western.


WHR Reservoir #1 usually has good shoreline habitat but was pretty full today.  
Solitary Sandpiper and lingering Bank Swallows, plus an early Yellow-rumped 
Warbler were probably the best birds here.


Total species for the entire WHR complex: 68


On the way home I got off I-25 at the Carr Exit, drove west on Larimer CR92 and 
then south along CR5 to Buckeye Road.  Best bird was a Cassin's Kingbird in the 
Round Butte Valley Ranch yard.  In general, however, very few birds on the 
fenceline or elsewhere on CR5.


Dave Leatherman

Fort Collins

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