After being off Tuesday and Wednesday due to the storm, we headed out later
in the morning today, not sure whether we'd be able to open or not. The
weather was not too bad (winter coats but our bare hands were not
freezing), a little sun and no wind. A good number of birds moving around
over
As I haven't left the house in about a week, I have avoided observing the
carnage of the birds on the roads. We have however been rotating 8
different hummer feeders since Tuesday morning for the dozen or so hummers
that have been sticking around our yard this week. We had as many as 7 on
one
Urling & I walked the Walker Trail this morning (Cherry Creek trail, south
from Walker Road). It had zillions of birds; we tallied 31 species that
included
32 Mourning Doves 25 magpies 43 Western Bluebirds 44 House Finches
25 meadowlarks.
Also a family of Cedar Waxwings, 8
I just posted a similar experience. Birds here were exhausted too and
easily approached. Sad deal for sure
On Thursday, September 10, 2020 at 1:02:55 AM UTC-6 SeEtta wrote:
> As a result of the brutal storm last night and a very low clouds today
> south Central Colorado including parts of
The recent storm caused a considerable fallout of birds in the San Luis
Valley. In Monte Vista, 12-14 inches of snow effectively cutoff any source
of food for many migrating birds. It was not looking very good. Lisa and I
did our best and cleared lawn and spread some seed for the ground
Beautiful out on this trail this morning! We did not get there until 9:30
but all these birds were very active & when we came back down the trail
they seemed to all have disappeared so we timed it just right!
Tons of Mountain BBs, a few Western BBs. Robins all over!
Rock Wrens, Green-Tailed &
Hi all
Just had two Townsend's Warbler in our yard's windbreak.
Thanks, Gary Lefko, Nunn
http://www.friendsofthepawneegrassland.org
https://www.inaturalist.org/projects/birds-and-more-of-the-pawnee-national-grassland
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Fascinating behavior. This reminded me of a scenario I watched many years ago
while working on Colorado Breeding Bird Atlas II. I was just finishing
surveying the yard and buildings of a farmstead near Yuma when I heard a
cacophony of calls from a large elm. When I looked for the source of the
The other day I was enjoying watching a mixed flock of birds, hoping for a
warbler or 2 to pop up when I noticed that there was a Bushtit hanging by
its tail -- caught on some sort of twig, it was totally helpless, flapping
a little, head pointed to the ground. The interesting thing was that one
Yesterday I was feeling somewhat disgruntled because Jared (who lives just
a couple miles from me) was seeing all sorts of things that I wasn't. He
said he had his FOY White-crowned. Well, I looked up from reading his
report and there was a sparrow in the yard with those distinctive brown
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