The annual Ft. Morgan/Weldona CBC was held today, and if I hear veteran 
compiler, Bruce Bosley correctly, this was the 50th count in the circle.  I'm 
posting this to Cobirds because I think there will be interest among the 
Cobirds community, but I hope Bruce posts the official version later.  Overall, 
the count was approaching an excellent total of 80 species at our late lunch 
compilation, and there were still some relatively easy targets out there.

[Note here that "Target" is really an appropriate word since one of the birds 
available for a late day pick up was Great-tailed Grackle and there is a flock 
with the habit of congregating at the Walmart in the late afternoon before 
roosting.  If you've birded for Green Parakeet in McAllen, TX you will know 
what I'm referring to.  50,000, or maybe even 100,000 Great-tailed Grackle (and 
a few Green Parakeets) congregate every afternoon on a crossroads in McAllen 
that features a Target, among other stores.  It is absolutely Hitchcockian.]

Best bird on the Ft. Morgan CBC (I'm back to that, now) was undoubtedly Snowy 
Owl, and very likely the same individual that was spotted about three weeks ago 
right along I-76 in Ft. Morgan.  The owl was spotted in a dry irrigation ditch 
Thursday afternoon by a sharp-eyed school bus driver heading home after 
drop-off.  The SBD took a picture of the owl, looking much like what was 
photographed in November, sitting on top of a black-tailed jackrabbit (pesky 
wabbit).  That made a lot of us think that the bird would be satiated and 
stationary the next morning, and it was, at least for a while.  This morning 
five of us convereged on the general area and found the owl perched on the end 
of a center pivot just east of the intersection of Roads W and 15.  However, 
within two hours it was no longer to be found at that site.  In any event, 
since the bird was found yesterday only about 4 miles from the November 
sighting, it's a good bet that it is the same bird and that it will continue to 
hang somewhere in the area.

As always, be thoughtful and ethical.  Respect the bird, private property, 
local residents, and drive carefully.

Bill Kaempfer
Boulder

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