Headed out fairly early for me (while Dr. Mlodinow was eating second meal of 
the day) and thought I would try Eaton Cemetery first.  The traffic along the 
"back way" from Fort Collins to Eaton was horrible.  As Red Foxx used to say, 
"That's urban renewal, for ya".


I arrived at Eaton Cemetery as the armada of mowers left their barn harbor for 
the open green seas.  Forget that.


Crow Valley Campground looked wonderful in the cool mist of this day.  Birds 
were flying in from the north.  Lots of promise.  But as it turned out, I had 
40 species with no rarities.  FOS Townsend's Solitaires (5).  A few pipits flew 
over.  As did an adult Bald Eagle, which I am not sure I've ever seen right 
over the campground (I later found it up at the A&B #1 on CR124), 1 Dusky 
Flycatcher, a couple pewees, 1 Red-headed Woodpecker, FOS down low 
White-crowned Sparrow, 1 Lincoln's Sparrow, many Chipping Sparrows, few 
Brewer's/Clay-colors, 1 Ruby-crowned Kinglet, heard one Green-tailed Towhee, 
fair number of Wilson's, maybe a half dozen Yellow-rumps, you get the picture.  
No vireos,  no really big flycatchers, no gnatcatchers, no unusual warblers, no 
grosbeaks, no thrushes besides robins, no sapsuckers, very few empids, no 
juncos, very few Spizella sparrows other than Chipping.  A few lingering early 
fall migrants, a few mid to late fall migrants starting to show up.


North of the campground and north of the USFS Work Center along CR77 just south 
of GR96 (where the birding trail starts) was a little group of 5 Cassin's 
Kingbirds sitting on fence wires.  Suspect they were working their way toward 
the outback in the northern part of the Crow Valley Campground complex 
(Mourning Dove Trail, dispersed camping, creek floodplain) where they tend to 
linger for a few days at this time of year.


A&B#1 on CR124 about a mile or so west of CR77, besides the Bald Eagle on a 
power pole looking to my untrained eye perilously close to electrocution, I had 
a fair number of shorebirds, but nothing unusual (avocets, lb dowitchers, both 
yellowlegs, least sand, solitary sand, snipe, Baird's sand).  Couldn't tell 
what the shorebirds in the muck north of the road were eating but last year at 
this time it was leeches!  Most interesting were Savannah Sparrows on the fence 
wire and a Wilson's Warbler snatching wild sunflower aphids so close beside the 
car I could barely focus the camera.  Just west of there was a dark (taiga?) 
Merlin with prey (blackbird?) that flew off before I could get stopped.


Then got a text about David Wade's discovery of Blackburnian Warbler at 
Prospect Ponds Natural Area in FC and tempted my fate with the Weld County 
sheriff, Nunn police, Wellington police, State Patrol, etc.  No police chase or 
ticket.  Bird chase ended the way many of them do - close but no bird.  Has it 
occurred to you "ticket" and "tick" share four letters, as if the latter could 
possibly be the etymological root of the former?


Dave Leatherman

Fort Collins


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