Dinosaur Ridge - Bird Conservancy of the Rockies
Colorado, USA
Daily Raptor Counts: Apr 07, 2019
-------------------------------------------------------------------

Species            Day's Count    Month Total   Season Total
------------------ ----------- -------------- --------------
Black Vulture                0              0              0
Turkey Vulture               2             40             41
Osprey                       0              5              5
Bald Eagle                   0              0             12
Northern Harrier             0              3              4
Sharp-shinned Hawk           0             16             25
Cooper's Hawk                1             20             26
Northern Goshawk             0              0              0
Red-shouldered Hawk          0              0              0
Broad-winged Hawk            0              0              0
Red-tailed Hawk              4            155            248
Rough-legged Hawk            0              0              0
Swainson's Hawk              0              1              1
Ferruginous Hawk             0              4              8
Golden Eagle                 0              3              6
American Kestrel             2             17             22
Merlin                       0              0              0
Peregrine Falcon             0              3              3
Prairie Falcon               1              2              2
Mississippi Kite             0              0              0
Unknown Accipiter            0              5              8
Unknown Buteo                0              3              8
Unknown Falcon               0              0              0
Unknown Eagle                0              1              3
Unknown Raptor               0              0              3

Total:                      10            278            425
----------------------------------------------------------------------

Observation start time: 08:00:00 
Observation end   time: 14:00:00 
Total observation time: 5.5 hours

Official Counter:        Mike Fernandez

Observers:        David Gubenkaian, Pam Batton

Visitors:
David Gubenkaian, 930-1030 mst, helped spot for an hour. David started
doing HawkWatch in its first year, 30+ years ago, before the platform was
built. He had some great stories to share. Pam Batton (longtime Dinosaur
Ridge HawkWatcher), led a group of six secondary school teachers taking a
continuing education class on raptors through the School of Mines. Pam &
her class put more eyes on the skies from 1030-1200. Had quite a few hikers
stop to ask questions, most had some familiarity with what we were doing.
Handed out one HawkWatch info card. The trail was VERY busy today. 


Weather:
It was a warm, dry and breezy day on the ridge. Fairly windy (from NE)
early, settled down to breezy later. All day we had mostly cloudless skies.
(PWS: Idledale)

Raptor Observations:
Migrating Raptors: Most migrators were at a low height of flight and close
to the ridge. One migrating Red-tailed appeared likely a Harlan's. It was a
promising early watch followed by a long lull in migratory and local
activity.

Non-Migrating Raptors: A local Red-tailed Hawk (missing a tail feather)
hovered right above platform motionless into the wind for a long time and
then stooped south, only to return to dive at migrating Red-tailed. Local
Red-taileds numbered 3-4 as best I could tell. A local American Kestrel
flew a zig-zaggy course over Matthews-Winters park. A local Red-tailed
couple performed courtship behaviors above Mt Morrison. Locals seemed to
take the high ground most of the day, over the foothills, often at the
limit of 8x binoculars.

Non-raptor Observations:
Also seen or heard: Spotted Towhee (1), Black-billed Magpie (3), Dark-eyed
Junco (8, not able to further identify), American Crow (2), Common Raven
(1), Western Meadowlark (1), Woodhouse's Scrub-jay (1), Townsend's
Solitiare (1), Bushtit (2), and (my favorite of the day) a Canyon Wren (1).
Also spotted a lone deer on the western slope of the ridge. 

Predictions:
Great weather continues. May your numbers be high and your time go quickly.

========================================================================
Report submitted by Matthew Smith ([email protected])
Dinosaur Ridge - Bird Conservancy of the Rockies information may be found at:
http://www.birdconservancy.org/


More site information at hawkcount.org:  
http://hawkcount.org/siteinfo.php?rsite=123

Site Description:
Dinosaur Ridge is the only regularly staffed hawkwatch in Colorado and is
the best place in the world to see migrating Ferruginous Hawks. Dinosaur
Ridge may be the best place in the country to see the rare dark morph of
the Broad-winged Hawk (a few are seen each spring). Hawkwatchers who linger
long enough may see resident Golden Eagles, Red-tailed Hawks and Prairie
Falcons, in addition to migrating Swainson's, Cooper's and Sharp-shinned
Hawks, American Kestrels and Turkey Vultures. Peregrine Falcons and
Ferruginous Hawks are uncommon; Northern Goshawk is rare but regular.
Non-raptor species include Rock Wren, and sometimes Bushtit, Western
Bluebird, Sandhill Crane, White-throated Swift, American White Pelican or
Dusky Grouse. Birders are always welcome. 
The hawkwatch is generally staffed by volunteers from Bird Conservancy of
the Rockies from about 9 AM to around 3 PM from March 1st to May 7th.

Directions to site:
>From exit 259 on I-70 towards Morrison, drive south under freeway and take
left into first parking lot, the Stegosaurus lot. Follow small signs from
the south side of lot to hawkwatch site. The hike starts heading east on an
old two-track and quickly turns south onto a trail on the west side of the
ridge. When the trail nears the top of the ridge, turn left, head through
the gate, and walk to the clearly-visible, flat area at the crest of the
ridge.


-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Colorado Birds" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To post to this group, send email to [email protected].
To view this discussion on the web visit 
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/cobirds/b5972badaef05dc590abdd3a2a69d9e0%40hawkcount.org.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to