Teller Farms are SOUTH of the North Teller Lake #5 parking lot off Valmont. The 
trail going NORTH from there (refered to in Steve's post), is the White Rocks 
Trail. The Willow Flycatcher(s) are where the White Rocks Trail crosses Boulder 
Creek, and I imagine where the Grasshopper Sparrows were is up in the 
grasslands on Gunbarrel Hill north of the creek. There was a singing Sage 
Thrasher up by the Gunbarrel Hill water tank late last week. 
 
The Dickcissels and Bobolinks are south fo the parking lot, in the Teller hay 
fields. 

Christian Nunes

 



Date: Tue, 19 Jun 2012 08:51:43 -0700
From: davedn...@msn.com
To: cobirds@googlegroups.com
Subject: [cobirds] Re: North Teller Farms, Boulder, today


Looking at Google maps, there is a lake called Teller Lake #5, and one
further south, simply called Teller Lake.  Is the latter the one you refer
to regarding the stream crossing and the Willow Flycatcher?
 
Thanks,
Dave

On Saturday, June 16, 2012 12:15:17 PM UTC-6, Steven Mlodinow wrote:
Greetings All, 


I went n. from the "Golden-crowned Sparrow" parking lot at Teller Farms off of 
Valmont. I parked at 5am (the earliest allowable time per sign) and walked at 
full tilt for about 2 miles until I was standing in the rolling grasslands at 
about 5:30am.


Unlike last year, when serenaded by Cassin's Sparrows and such, 2 Grasshopper 
Sparrows and 1 Vesper were all I could detect (not to slight the many Western 
Meadowlarks). Walking back, there is a stream crossing just n. of the lake one 
walks past. This stream crossing held a WILLOW FLYCATCHER last year, and 
indeed, does so again this year. A 100 yards or so farther south, a bird flew 
into a cottonwood and started to call. To my utter surprise, it was a 
WHITE-BREASTED NUTHATCH. As it continued to call, sounding most agitated, I 
realized that it was not of the mountain race, but was an EASTERN WB 
NUTHATCH!!!! After 30-40 seconds, it took off to the south. I pursued, but it 
kept on going, landing for about 10 seconds, calling repeatedly, flying another 
100 yards, stopping, and so forth. 


Otherwise, no surprises. The Weld County Road 7 ponds have a baby avocet or 
two, but not much else.


The St Vrain State Park police force (that's what they act like) tried to give 
me a parking ticket for parking on private property (at the intersection of 119 
and WCR 7). I strode back to my car, and the officer was rather befuddled when 
I said, "I have permission from the folks that own this place to park here." 


"Who gave you that permission?" He replied... of course, this is ignoring the 
fact that I was parked on private property, and thus in a spot that he had no 
jurisdiction over. I answered his question, and he said, "I guess I'll take 
your word for it and not give you a ticket."


Really. 
Nothing better to do, I gather. It really amazes me how much they try to 
prevent people (even those with annual park passes) from stopping anywhere 
along that road at all seasons, no matter how far off the actual road you are, 
no matter how brief your pause. One of life's little mysteries. 


So, now that my tirade is over, back to birds -- the Firestone Gravel Pits had 
precisely one duck upon them, the continuing imm male COMMON GOLDENEYE.


Good Birding,
Steven Mlodinow
Longmont, CO
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