Yesterday Tom Whitten and I did an ambitious southeast circle, a 60 species 
winter day but we covered a lot of ground to find the birds, starting early 
in Bent County at Ft Lyon Wildlife Easement, then to Van's Grove, John 
Martin Reservoir, Hasty Campground, then Prowers county to Lamar Community 
College Woods, Thurston Reservoir, then Kiowa County to visit Upper Queens 
and Lower Queens Reservoirs, Neenoshe Reservoir, then up through Eads and 
west to Lakes Meredith and Henry in Crowley County.

Highlights in Bent County were a huge number of Snow Geese with Ross's 
mixed in at John Martin Reservoir, many thousands on the water with Bald 
Eagles standing on all sides of the surrounding ice, with wave after wave 
of white geese coming in above us for over an hour. At Hasty campground 
below the dam we saw three Greater Roadrunners in less than ten minutes, it 
was a bit of a stunner. They were walking in the short grass, bug-catching. 
In Prowers County, Lamar Community College woods had a large concentration 
of American Robins and a few Townsend's Solitaires focusing on the 
junipers, along with a Yellow-rumped Warbler, a Ruby-crowned Kinglet, and 
two Northern Cardinals. At Thurston Reservoir we saw something interesting, 
eight Red-tailed Hawks and one Rough-legged Hawk lined up on the shoreline, 
with ducks swimming near and sometimes right in front of them...the hawks 
ignored the ducks, it appeared that the high water had receded, leaving 
fish in small pooled areas, with the hawks standing in a row dining 
together. In Kiowa County at Upper Queens Reservoir were massive numbers of 
Snow Geese, I'd estimate over ten thousand. Neenoshe Locust Grove with a 
Merlin on guard was quiet.

Other than John Martin which was mostly iced over, the reservoirs were all 
open water, the large numbers of Western Meadowlarks and Great Blue Herons 
seemed indicative of the mild winter we've had, eight raptor species with 
very high counts were seen at all locations, including a couple Harlan's 
Red-tailed Hawks, two Prairie Falcons, a Merlin, over 40 Northern Harriers, 
many Ferruginous Hawks including more dark-morphs than I'd previously seen, 
and lots of Rough-legged Hawks. Perched American Kestrals and Northern 
Shrikes were plentiful and it occurred to me that they had a lot to choose 
from with all open ground, no snow cover. Notable misses were no Loons, no 
Longspurs.

Dan Stringer
Larkspur, CO

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