Just a clarification on Cooley Lake and this swan from "the management."  
This is indeed a mute swan, an escapee from a nearby polo community pond.  
Several times in the last few years we have chased it down and returned it 
to its home.  With staff resources extremely limited due to the pandemic 
and much higher priorities trying to manage a heavily-used park, we are not 
pursuing the bird again at this time.

We know many in the birding (and outdoor recreation) community are curious 
about the management and access to this lake, so I thought to clarify. This 
is a limited access wildlife area as a part of South Platte Park.  90% of 
it is viewable from the Mineral Avenue Trail/Sidewalk (albeit at a 
distance), with views also available from the Mary Carter Greenway Trail 
north of Carson Nature Center.  South Platte Park offers around 16 free 
hikes into the area throughout the year via our website, as well as the 
fact we use it as an occasional destination for some of our fee-based 
nature programming.  We use this area for bird census data collection by 
our volunteers periodically as well.  

We don't want any impression going out that this is an area for exclusive 
use by anyone.  The management prescription applies to all!  Members 
(Residents) of the Polo Reserve gated community may have one additional 
viewing angle from properties they manage, but no legal trail or access to 
approach the lake any closer than the Mineral Trail is.  The new Wild Plum 
development in the Town of Columbine Valley has a walking trail on the 
perimeter of their property, but no legal access into or to approach Cooley 
Lake either.  This area is part of the spectrum of management for the Park 
that ranges from the extremely high use of the bike trail along the Platte 
to this no-use area, with a variety of access levels in between.  If you 
wish to learn more, you can find details in the management plan available 
on the South Platte Park webpage.  Many members of the environmental 
community have helped to support the management decisions for this area 
through the years and value the intrinsic (existence, bequest, habitat) 
values of it.  Requests for opening or more access become a slippery slope 
to a wide variety of interest groups with birding or walking quickly 
leading to demands for access for fishing, boats, swimming, and much more.  
It could quickly lose the high habitat value it holds compared to the lakes 
south of Mineral or our other recreation-based lakes that have higher use 
levels.  

Please no public shaming of the author of the original post - the southwest 
corner of the lake is immediately viewable to all through the deer-fence 
along the Mineral Trail.  Indeed, if you walk or bike this sidewalk to the 
corner of the lake, you can often get intimate photos of hunting herons, 
egrets, grebes, and mergansers!  I just wish to share with our community 
and ask for your continued support in helping preserve some less-disturbed 
habitat in the middle of our metropolis. Recently the level of trespass on 
the north side of the lake has increased.  What used to be a private 
horse-ranch on our border has become a new subdivision.  The boundary is 
signed and fenced, but there seem to be a lot of fence-climbers with a new 
boldness for 'unrestrained personal freedoms' evolving out of the 
pandemic.  Rangers are patrolling the area and have been writing citations 
for trespass to anglers, dog walkers, and others they encounter.  If you 
have questions about the area, feel free to contact me at South Platte 
Park.  I appreciate your continued support in the idea that not every space 
needs to filled with people.

Skot Latona, Littleton, CO (Arapahoe)
Manager of South Platte Park



On Sunday, July 19, 2020 at 9:08:12 AM UTC-6, modise wrote:
>
> Sadly, this is the best photo I got that shows the bill.  I don't see any 
> dark on the beak - could this be a mute swan?  It was still on the lake at 
> about 8:15 a.m., but considerably farther north on the west side.  If you 
> are a member of the polo club there, or know one, you would probably have 
> an awesome look at it.
>
> Bryan Arnold - Littleton
>
> [image: IMG_5391.jpeg]
>
>
> On Sunday, July 19, 2020 at 6:23:15 AM UTC-6, modise wrote:
>>
>> Currently looking at a white swan on Cooley Lake - SW corner.  No bins so 
>> can’t identify.  Moving north. 
>>
>> About 1.5 miles west of Santa Fe on the north side of Mineral.  Bad 
>> iPhone pics will be posted later. 
>>
>> Bryan Arnold - Littleton 
>
>

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