Just a friendly reminder about shore access at Barr Lake: birders can only 
access the shore *north* of the bird banding station. South of the banding 
station is considered the "Wildlife Refuge" and you must stay on marked 
trails. While they don't seem to enforce this much, I've confirmed with 
several of the Park Rangers and this is also depicted on the park maps. 

Adam Vesely
Thornton, CO

On Thursday, October 3, 2019 at 11:47:41 AM UTC-6, Robert Righter wrote:
>
> Because one can walk out on the sand towards the water's edge, makes it 
> very easy for close viewing of the birds.
>
> Just in the southeast section:
> 3 American Golden-Plovers, (at least one was a Jv.)
> 50+ Killdeer
> 2 Marbled Godwits
> 3 Jv. Sanderlings
> 20 Baird’s Sandpipers
> 3-4 Pectorial Sandpipers
> 1 Least Sandpiper
> 20+ Forster’s Gulls
>
> 1000’s of Barn Swallows and vast numbers of other regularly occurring 
> waterbirds were present
> If there was more time I’d visit Meredith at Conservancy Banding station. 
> It would have been fun to see the Philadelphia Vireo
>
> Lots going on at Barr Lake, Come on out!
>
> Bob Righter
> Denver, CO
>
>
>

-- 
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 cobirds+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com.
To view this discussion on the web visit 
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/cobirds/67d1a1c7-6e4b-411c-8e89-03d20829c531%40googlegroups.com.

Reply via email to