Hello Fellow Birders,
 
   I apologize for the tardy posting.  Last week  I worked the Breeding 
Bird Survey that runs north and south on Kit Carson  County roads about 8 miles 
east of Burlington.  I occasionally get a  Dickcissel on this route, most 
years I don't.  This year I detected  Dickcissels at 20 stops for a total of 
46 birds!  I also detected the  first-ever-for-this-route Mountain Plover 
foraging the lightly weedy corner of a  center-pivot plot just north of 
I-70.
 
   I'd recently read that populations of Red-winged Blackbirds  are in 
decline.  On this BBS route I see lots of Red-wingeds disappearing  into the 
wheat, I'm guessing they're nesting there as they would a cattail  marsh.  But 
it seems to me that if the wheat gets harvested before the  nests come to 
fruition they'll lose those nests and the habitat in which to try  again.
 
Keep  Smilin',
Kevin

Sent from my Remington Rand Typewriter via my Rotary  Dial Wall Phone

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