The weather report on High Plains Public Radio is stuck on "in southeast 
Colorado today, high of 94 and sunny".   It has been abnormally calm windwise, 
fairly low humidity, and with cool nights.  Not all that unpleasant, just not 
conducive to causing pulses of bird migration.  Oh sure, there have been some 
really good birds reported (see mostly eBird, somewhat COBIRDS).  But in my 
personal experience the sledding of late to be very slow.  Every day adds a few 
to the list but over the last two weeks+ it has never been a case of having to 
choose which movement in the tree crowns or understory to check.  It has been 
more a matter of finding any movement that isn't caused by a grasshopper, 
dragonfly or monarch.  Insects abound.  Grasshoppers, mostly two-lined and 
differential, by the dozens leap along the plant edge of every road and path.  
Big tarantula hawks lumber past like B-17s.  Migrant birds are out there, but 
just a trickle, one/hour most days.


When down here, I always concentrate on the mythical "Lamar CBC" circle which 
extends 7 miles or so in all directions from the heart of downtown, and which 
now and for the next few years is/will be dominated by highway construction.  
Since September 1 my list is up to 99 species.  That's OK, and certainly I've 
added several year birds, but that's mostly because I was out of state for most 
of spring migration and because I've really been hitting the regular spots 
enough to use up half a tube of sunscreen.  I got chiggers somewhere (either 
the north end of LCC or at Fairmount Cemetery) the first damn day, so have been 
intimidated about going off into the bushes (I loathe DEET about as much as 
chiggers).  The mosquitoes and mouth-loving house flies have been persistent, 
also, which I suppose feeds a lot of Wilson's Warblers, maybe vireos.


Highlights by area (no dates given because none would appear to be chaseable, 
just listed in the way of description of the situation):


LCC Woods (several visits)

Red-eyed Vireo (1)

Chestnut-sided Warbler (1 first-fall female)

Northern Cardinal (two families)

Brown Thrasher (still a few, one or so may winter)

Barn Owl (1)

Purple Martin (1 female fly-by)

Great Crested Flycatcher

Red-breasted Nuthatch

MacGillivray's Warbler (1f)

Pine Siskin (flyovers heard a couple times, if they stay they will have 
sunflower seeds galore)


Riverside Cemetery (Maple Street e of Main, north end of town, 3 visits)

Baltimore Oriole (1f)

Orchard Oriole (1 pair)

Great Crested Flycatcher (1)

Red-breasted Nuthatch (few)


Fairmount Cemetery (several visits)

Townsend's Warbler (2)

Peregrine Falcon (flyover)

Golden-crowned Kinglet (1f)

Cassin's Vireo (2)

Hammond's Flycatcher (1)

Dusky Flycatcher (1)

Red-breasted Nuthatch (3-4)

Western Tanager (1)

Olive-sided Flycatcher (4)


Willow Valley Subdivision (private yard)

Blue-headed Vireo (1)

Red-breasted Nuthatch (4)


Private feeder on the west side of town

Baltimore Oriole (1m)


Thurston Reservoir

Peregrine Falcon (1)

not much else (can't see most of the water because of cattail growth, no shore 
due to high water level)


Birds still around, which I associate with the "early" part of migration: 
Chimney Swifts (locals gone, the ones here are from areas north of here ?, saw 
7 go down the Lamar Post Office chimney between 7:06 and 7:15 on 13September), 
Mississippi Kite (still a few drifting thru), Yellow Warblers dwindling, 
orioles (getting more and more sparse by the day), Black-chinned Hummingbirds 
(indicative of late nesting locally?), Common Nighthawk (several still evident 
every evening), kingbirds (Eastern mostly gone, Westerns dwindling, Cassin's 
showing up).


Other areas:


Lower Queens Reservoir (south and west sides)

Black-bellied Plover (3)

Sanderling (1)

Peregrine Falcon (1)


Tempel's Grove (multiple visits)

Black-and-white Warbler (2f)

Townsend's Warbler (2)

Swainson's Thrush (1)

Red-eyed Vireo (1)

Cassin's Vireo (1)

Ovenbird (1)

Northern Parula (1f)

Warbling Vireo (1)

Ruby-crowned Kinglet (few)

Broad-winged Hawk (2 juv)

Yellow-billed Cuckoo (as many as 3 at a visit)

Great Crested Flycatcher (2)

American Redstart (at least 4)

Red-breasted Nuthatch (few)

Grasshopper Sparrow (1 juv on Bent CR35 just north of the grove on 9/14, which 
is getting sort of late)


private farmyard grove e of Wiley

Blue-headed Vireo (1)

Cassin's Vireo (1 bright)

Plumbeous Vireo (1)

Red-breasted Nuthatch (3)

Pine Siskin (flyover)


Hasty Campground (2 visits)

Willow Flycatcher (1, what I think was an eastern race bird)

White-breasted Nuthatch (1 eastern)

American Redstart (1f)

Eastern Bluebird (small group)

Warbling Vireo (2)


Van's Grove

Great Crested Flycatcher (1)

Red-breasted Nuthatch (1)

MacGillivray's Warbler (1)

Cicindela pulchra (our coolest tiger beetle in my opinion)


Nee Noshe Locust Grove (2 visits)

Townsend's Warbler (1)

Eastern Phoebe (1)


Two Buttes below the dam

Great Crested Flycatcher

Red-breasted Nuthatch (2-3)

Yellow-billed Cuckoo (heard)

Townsend's Warbler (2)

Cassin's Kingbird (1)


Note that Red-breasted Nuthatches seem to be every location with more than 10 
trees.  Although no Pygmy Nuthatches or Evening Grosbeaks have shown up this 
visit, they have in the past and are certainly possible.  Ditto for Mountain 
Chickadee and Woodhouse Scrub-Jay.  Clay-colored Sparrows poured thru Lamar 
area on about 5September (most evident Spizella during that period).  Vespers 
increasing.  No white-crowns or juncos yet.  Ruby-crowned Kinglets, 
Yellow-rumped Warblers and Orange-crowned Warblers starting to show up in 
numbers (aka "middle migration" species).  Glenn Walbek reported a Blackburnian 
Warbler of late at Nee Noshe locust grove (a place where I have had two of the 
three worst chigger cases in my life, just a heads-up).  Downy Woodpeckers 
working on honeylocust bean weevils in half-brown, half-green pods.  Lots of 
Red-headed Woodpeckers, especially juveniles.  Saw one the other day at Nee 
Noshe eating olives.  In short, mega-rarities in short supply but plenty of 
entertainment out there.  And I'll admit to self-advising not to succumb to the 
temptation to think ill of Wilson's Warblers just because that's what every 
promising movement in the leaves seems to turn into.  Like we always say, all 
it takes it one individual bird or behavior to make an outing worth it, right?


Dave Leatherman

Fort Collins (as of this Sunday night)





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