Tom Whitten and I visited three Kiowa County Reservoirs yesterday, seeing 
our first of the year Swainson's Hawk on Hwy 287 and then arriving at 
Neenoshe Reservoir at 6:45 a.m. They've thinned and partially cleared the 
west-side locust grove there, it doesn't look ideal. The two-track that 
goes north into a peninsula hosted some Baird's, Least, Solitary, and one 
Semipalmated Sandpiper, both Yellowlegs, and off to our left a bit were 
three Snowy Plover. Also my first Vesper and Savannah Sparrows of the year. 

At Upper Queens Reservoir we saw a very large white gull Way across on the 
northeast side but weren't able to confirm whether it was the 
Glaucous-winged Gull found by Mark Peterson. Three white geese mixed in 
with American White Pelicans in the same area also went unidentified. 

Lower Queens had an amazing amount of American Avocet, we estimated well 
over 100, seriously, and a lot of Yellowlegs, probably 30, mostly Lesser. 
Working in up to a foot of water made it look like many of these three 
species were swimming, and the vocalization between the three was pretty 
darn noisy. Two Black-necked Stilts, 33 White-faced Ibis between two 
groups, roughly 30 Long-billed Dowitchers in the northwest corner, about 8 
Baird's Sandpipers. 

At Thurston Reservoir (Prowers Co) we were greeted by about 20 Sandhill 
Cranes lifting up from the field north of the water, a few remaining to 
feed. Many American Avocets including a group of 23 in the air, not 
agreeing on where to land. Pied-billed Grebes were issuing their loud calls 
around the reservoir, that one is quite a tune. 

Adobe Creek Reservoir was lower than I'd ever seen it, separating into two 
bodies of water with all edges far from the roads. I think the western one 
of the two is in Bent County, among many American Avocets there (probably 
30) were two Marbled Godwits.

At Lake Meredith (Crowley Co) we saw a weathered-looking adult Herring 
Gull, a Clark's Grebe, and American Pipits. Then we jumped across the road 
to Lake Henry to find...nothing much. 

In all of those travels covering a lot of ground we saw a healthy number of 
Loggerhead Shrikes,13 duck species, 12 burrowing Owls, a few Barn Swallows 
and 2 Cliff Swallows, a raven we'd like to call Chihuahuan, very few 
raptors, and had the feeling that everything we didn't see is just about to 
show up. Spring has sprung.

Dan Stringer
Larkspur, CO

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