Friday, 23 December 2016

Re: [cobirds] Re: Lake Dillon Purple Sandpiper parking lot. Summit County.

The Purple Sandpiper pulled up a LOT of food out of the creek during the hour that I watched it yesterday. I saw it gobble a bunch (10+) of those big roundworms that other people have photographed, and it was getting a lot of smaller prey items too, too small to see from a distance. At one point it hit the jackpot and gobbled about 40 of these smaller prey items in 30 seconds! Now, the situation may change, but as far as I can tell so far, the bird is healthy, and it's staying put because it's happy with the food options.

Nathan Pieplow
Boulder

On Fri, Dec 23, 2016 at 5:43 PM, Joe Roller <jroller9@gmail.com> wrote:
Good question. Bonnie.
Several quick-fingered shutter-bugs have captured the errant sandpiper pulling round worms
from the watery gravel where it has been feeding actively, much as robins pull earthworms from the soil.

So the Purple Sandpiper DOES have a food supply (although maybe be not seafood), and it has thrived for at least a week, feeding in the warm effluent waters
of Iron Springs, where it debauches into Dillon Reservoir. Who knows, the bird could have been there for weeks? If this were fall 
migration season, one could expect it to move on, responding to the urge to travel. But the bird may sense that it has reached
a good spot to spend the winter, so I would not mess with it. 

It may be difficult to see harm in supplementing the bird's food supply with mealworms, but there are possible consequences one cannot foresee. 
And at the very least, laying out a smorgasbord of mealworms could just happen a few hours or  a day or two before it decided to leave it's happy microhabitat.
And if that happened, whoever tossed the vermiform banquet could be blamed, even if blameless.

My 4 cents (inflation)

Joe Roller, Denver

On Fri, Dec 23, 2016 at 5:28 PM, ednbonniebaker <ednbonniebaker@gmail.com> wrote:
Joe

I've got a question for you re: the survival of the Purple Sandpiper with no apparent food to maintain its strength and ability to move-on eventually

I've just gotta ask the question . . .

why can't we feed it mealworms or whatever it takes to keep him on this earth.

I don't see the harm in it; this is a very rare situation; all i can see is good from doing so.

Admittedly it's what I did for the Eastern Bluebird that came for a visit on my Bluebird Trail in Summit County.  It filled-up on mealworms during our April 2016 snowstorms; then after a week, moved on.

Bonnie Boex 
Dillon, Summit County, Colorado

On Thursday, December 22, 2016 at 6:01:53 PM UTC-7, Joe Roller wrote:
Lost and Found Department.

Found: 1 winter glove.

Please contact me, and I will return this to you.

Joe Roller, Denver





















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