I decided to launch November with a jaunt out to Prewitt/Jackson to see what 
might be about. For the most part the birding was pretty good though it was 
mostly the usual suspects. I had one spot that I thought would be worth passing 
along, for those who still have an unslaked thirst for shorebirds. 
Prewitt had hundreds of waterfowl, but aside from the pelicans, cormorants and 
western grebes, most were snugged up against the far (south) shore, and light 
conditions and heat waves made ID pretty much impossible. A walk along the full 
length of the dam and then along the south shore would probably yield a host of 
ducks/grebes/geese for someone who wanted to make a several mile trek with a 
scope.
Meanwhile, at the southwest end near the Inlet Canal (Inlet Delta?), from the 
road I noticed a number of shorebirds working the mudflat. Assuming that they 
were all killdeer, I nevertheless grabbed the scope and walked out for a look. 
To my surprise, there were numerous non-killdeer present. I then spent a 
pleasant hour arguing with eBird over my killdeer count (very conservatively at 
140), a dunlin (with enough alternate plumage remaining to show the black 
belly), two least sandpipers, a lesser yellowlegs and three Pluvialis plovers. 
One of these I was able to positively ID as a golden-plover, while the other 
two fled while I was checking out the dunlin. I didn’t see them in flight, so 
no look at the wingpits, but I suspect all three were goldens, which have been 
regular here this fall. 
I haven’t aggravated eBird that much in a while; it didn’t like any of those 
birds one bit, which is not too much of a surprise on the first of November. 
Looking across the mosaic of trickles coming from the Inlet Canal, I could see 
hundreds of shorebirds on the south shore. 95% were no doubt killdeer, but 
through the heat shimmer I could discern a variety of sizes, so some hardy soul 
with irrigation boots willing to slog across the mud could probably do well 
over there.
Also, I spent quite a bit of time picking through white-crown flocks looking 
for other Zono’s, without success. Then this morning a tan-striped 
white-throated showed up in my back yard. Go figure.

Norm Lewis
Lakewood

Sent from my iPad

-- 
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 post to this group, send email to cobirds@googlegroups.com.
To view this discussion on the web visit 
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/cobirds/F201D813-15A6-468E-8A96-A85887B2A7CB%40aol.com.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to