With these simple words at 2:49 p.m., Laura Steadman made lots of people happy 
this afternoon:

"While looking at the stilt sandpiper and plover (both still present), happened 
to catch site of a fork-tailed flycatcher on the western shore. Currently 
viewing."

It takes three things to make real birding news-finding a great bird, 
identifying that great bird, and getting the word out. Laura had the hat-trick 
today.  Well, it takes a great bird, too, I guess.  After a frustrating, 
one-observer report of Fork-tailed Flycatcher in mid-September that, I believe, 
was a first state record for Colorado, this was a species that was on a lot of 
our minds.  A bird to dream about, with its snappy black and white body, and 
that long, long, long tail.  Perhaps the only austral migrant (breeds south 
migrates north and sometimes gets to North America) semi-regularly seen in the 
US, this is a bird of interest anywhere north of Mexico.  I think it is even 
the story bird behind the cover of John Vanderpoel's soon to be published 
recounting of his North American Big Year in 2011, Full Chase Mode.  And chase 
we did.

I made it to Prince #2 at about 3:15 p.m., and there were already 8 other 
birders present.  It took a little while to re-find the bird, but we slowly 
starting thinking that the best strategy might be to walk out on the former 
County Road 111 in order to be below the dam for best viewing opportunities..  
After Peter Burke saw it flying somewhere off to the north of Prince #2, we all 
began walking that way; groups of us, handfuls of us, dozens of us, scores of 
us, hundreds of us.  Trying to count how many birders were there was like 
trying to count the number of Western Grebes currently on Union Reservoir, a 
little bit to the northwest.  There was Loch Kilpatrick, and there Mark Chavez. 
 Oh, and Rachel Hopper, and Carl Bendorf, and Bill Schmoker, and Gwen Moore, 
and Joey Kellner, and Glenn Walbeck, and on and on.  Steve Larson and Edie 
Israel were there, and they fly out South Africa at 3:00 a.m. Monday morning!  
I bet even the Widowbirds down there won't be as thrilling.

This is not the first time modest, little Prince Lake #2 in eastern Boulder 
County has made birding news.  Way back on October 26, 1975, then-Boulder 
birder Bruce Webb found what I believe to be the first state record of 
Sharp-tailed Sandpiper at Prince #2.  This bird elicited the famous comment 
from Colorado birding icon, Harold Holt, "It isn't a Sharp-tailed Sandpiper 
until the Colorado Bird Records Committee says it is a Sharp-tailed Sandpiper". 
(fide, Peter Gent).  Hey-another great bird during the last 10 days of October. 
 And the year before that, what must have been the first state record of 
Baird's Sparrow on, wait for this, October 29, 1974.  Prince #2 has also had 
Red Phalarope, Iceland (Iceland) Gull, and Eurasian Wigeon, and just over the 
hill at Prince #1 there is still a Yellow-billed Loon somewhere at the bottom 
of the pond, but that's a different story.

Then last week's wind-focused fallout brought American Golden Plovers to us, 
all over the Front Range--but importantly to this story, to Prince #2.  A 
couple of plovers made themselves easy to see in the soft, nourishing mud along 
the south shore of the small agriculture reservoir, and many went to Prince #2 
for their year, state, life, county, or whatever AGPL.  David Waltman notes 
that this was the start of our own Patagonia Roadside Rest stop phenomenon.  
Those plovers brought Laura Steadman out at 2:48 this afternoon.  Well, if the 
truth be told, I stopped at Prince #2 at 9:55 this morning.  So, the 
Fork-tailed Flycatcher must have arrived between 9:55 and 2:48 (insert smiley 
face here).

Thanks, Laura from 100 Colorado birders, and then some.  And, somebody remember 
to go out there at the end of next October.

Bill Kaempfer
Boulder

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