My husband and I hiked in Grand County earlier this week, including in an 
area burned by the 2020 East Troublesome Fire north of Grand Lake, and 
thought we would share a few observations of birds, plants, and our 
impressions of the area 21 months post-fire.  We hiked the Green Mountain 
Trail to Big Meadows, a beautiful 2 mile trail we have hiked from time to 
time over the last three decades.  The trail recently re-opened after it 
was cleared and log bridges were replaced, etc.  All of the trees in this 
area burned. Some trunks are still standing; many lay on the ground; many 
burned to ash.  

The wetter areas and some hillsides were incredibly lush with grasses and 
wildflowers including fireweed, thistle [primarily Cirsium centaureae I 
think), bedstraw, arnica, lupine, cow parsnip, harebell, yarrow, monkshood, 
asters/daisies and others.  And somewhat surprising to me, there were more 
bird species than I expected to see or hear.  Lincoln’s Sparrows were 
singing in many of the grassy drainage areas. We saw or heard Pine Siskins 
sparsely throughout; we saw one picking at one of the thistles.  A few 
Mountain Bluebirds flew through the burned tree trunks.  I sat in the 
grasses at the edge of Big Meadows for about 15 minutes to take it all in 
and recorded several species of birds – Western Wood-Pewee, Broad-tailed 
Hummingbird, American Robin, Mountain Chickadee, Pine Siskin, Yellow-rumped 
Warbler, and Lincoln’s Sparrow – even though the trees ringing the large 
meadow were all burned.  I reported 11 bird species total for our hike. 
https://ebird.org/checklist/S115398835

This forest area will be very different, but aspens are already coming up 
in the previous aspen areas.  It will be most interesting to see how this 
area transforms from burned soil, wood, and ash over the next three 
decades. Thanks to Jack Bushong’s Grand County article a few weeks ago, 
publicized by Mark Obmascik’s Cobirds post. We added a few more ebird lists 
for Grand County.

Denise Bretting, Loveland

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