Monday 4 November 2024

[cobirds] Varied Thrush in yard, Jefferson county

Birders, I had a male Varied Thrush in my yard for almost 2 days. It was here some, on 11/1/24, most of Saturday,11/2/24, and barely here on Sunday,11/3. I watched most of Sunday and did not see the bird in the afternoon. After watching all of today also,11/4,I was hoping it would be here, but it was not.

This bird seemed really hungry since it fed nonstop on 3 different Trumpet Honeysuckle Vines,[Lonicera sempervirens]. By Sunday evening there were hardly any berries left.

This male Varied Thrush was so skilled at jumping up from the ground to the vine berries. The local Townsend’s Solitaire, Spotted Towhee and Robins, usually miss and need a second attempt to grab these berries.

I have wondered why I have not seen a Varied Thrush before in my yard since I have so many berries.

What a priviledge.

I will keep my eyes open but think this bird is on it’s way.

 

Happy Birding,

Tina Jones

Littleton, CO, Jefferson county

 

 

[cobirds] Mount Zion Hawk Watch at Windy Saddle Park (04 Nov 2024) 9 Raptors

Mount Zion Hawk Watch at Windy Saddle Park
Golden, Greater Denver, Colorado, USA

This is a new raptor migration site identified and designated so only in mid-September 2024. This is Colorado's 1st fall hawk watch. To get to the site which is along Lookout Mountain Rd. in Golden, enter either Windy Saddle Park or Mount Zion into Google Maps on your favorite navigation app, or enter the coordinates 39.7368,-105.2454. From the parking lot ascend the stone steps to the watch site.

Daily Raptor Counts: Nov 04, 2024
SpeciesDay's CountMonth TotalSeason Total
Black Vulture000
Turkey Vulture0026
Osprey004
Bald Eagle009
Northern Harrier7719
Sharp-shinned Hawk1148
Cooper's Hawk0079
American Goshawk001
Broad-winged Hawk0015
Red-tailed Hawk010156
Rough-legged Hawk000
Swainson's Hawk0036
Ferruginous Hawk005
Golden Eagle1311
American Kestrel00138
Merlin004
Peregrine Falcon002
Prairie Falcon002
Mississippi Kite000
Unknown Accipiter000
Unknown Buteo004
Unknown Falcon000
Unknown Eagle000
Unknown Raptor009
Total:921568


Observation start time: 11:30:00
Observation end time: 15:30:00
Total observation time: 4 hours
Official CounterAjit Antony
Observers:



Visitors:
A young woman asked me "Seen anything cool?" "Migrating hawks" I replied, with silence from her, 10 minutes later she said she didn't see any hawks as she usually sees them easily. I explained migrating raptors often fly quite high requiring binoculars to see them. She mentioned Cooper's Hawk and I told her that she knew more than 95% of hikers at this spot. She said she wasn't very good at identifying hawks. I suggested, and showed her the free Raptor ID app, the Merlin app, and suggested she come for DFO trips. She took down the information.

Weather:
The forecast was for light NNE winds with 90% cloud cover dropping. At the watch, there was 4 inches of snow on the ground, wind was from the WNW>NNW, temperature 8-2°C, cloud cover 100%>85%>35%>55%, initial limited visibility due to snow flurries 28 km, and increasing the next hour to 39 km so that DIA could be seen gleaming in the sunlight, far to the east. By 12 PM sunshine could be seen over Boulder and gradually extended southward to Denver, with slivers of blue sky showing in the NE which gradually expanded and the clouds broke up. Looking at earth.nullschool.net there were 26 Km per hour winds aloft coming from the North, but further to the West of the watch, as well as North winds east of Denver at 42 km/h, with a lull in between, so some migrants could be seen.

Raptor Observations:
NNE winds were new for this watch. I re-read my notes from having a long video chat with Bryan Guarente the meteorologist and birder, in 2023, where he said that he thought the best raptor flights could be on N or NNE winds, but they were not common in Denver in fall. This was a very strange migration today. The 1st migrant was only at 12:49 PM, an SS over Lookout Mountain. At 1 PM an older juvenile NH (with the coloration of an adult male but with a brown instead of a gray dorsal wings) came in quite low from the West and flew SE. In the next 20 minutes I had 6 other NH, 5 of them in the West flying southward, then flying east over Lookout Mountain and then flying south or SSE, then no more. At 2:42 PM I saw a flock of 15 crows to the SW, and using my spotting scope to count their number, saw a much large birdâ€" a GE which migrated!

Non-raptor Observations:
Oregon Junco 1, Common Raven 1, American Crow 28.

Predictions:
Strong SW winds at 13 mph with gusts to 22 mph, windchill 40°F at 10:30 AM with a windchill high of 44°F. I'll give it a try to see if SW winds push any migrants from further west toward the watch.


Report submitted by Ajit Antony (aiantony@earthlink.net)
More information at hawkcount.org: [Site Profile] [Day Summary] [Month Summary]




Directions to site:
From I-70 from Northeast Denver, take Route 58, then a left turn going south on
Route 6, the 1st exit is for Lookout Mountain Road, turn right and follow the
clothes to find Windy Saddle Park parking lot on the right.
From I-70 from points west of Denver, take the Lookout Mountain Road and follow
it to the Windy Saddle Park parking lot, a longer route.


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Sunday 3 November 2024

[cobirds] Mount Zion Hawk Watch at Windy Saddle Park (03 Nov 2024) 11 Raptors

Mount Zion Hawk Watch at Windy Saddle Park
Golden, Greater Denver, Colorado, USA

This is a new raptor migration site identified and designated so only in mid-September 2024. This is Colorado's 1st fall hawk watch. To get to the site which is along Lookout Mountain Rd. in Golden, enter either Windy Saddle Park or Mount Zion into Google Maps on your favorite navigation app, or enter the coordinates 39.7368,-105.2454. From the parking lot ascend the stone steps to the watch site.

Daily Raptor Counts: Nov 03, 2024
SpeciesDay's CountMonth TotalSeason Total
Black Vulture000
Turkey Vulture0026
Osprey004
Bald Eagle009
Northern Harrier0012
Sharp-shinned Hawk0047
Cooper's Hawk0079
American Goshawk001
Broad-winged Hawk0015
Red-tailed Hawk910156
Rough-legged Hawk000
Swainson's Hawk0036
Ferruginous Hawk005
Golden Eagle2210
American Kestrel00138
Merlin004
Peregrine Falcon002
Prairie Falcon002
Mississippi Kite000
Unknown Accipiter000
Unknown Buteo004
Unknown Falcon000
Unknown Eagle000
Unknown Raptor009
Total:1112559


Observation start time: 10:15:00
Observation end time: 14:30:00
Total observation time: 4.25 hours
Official CounterAjit Antony
Observers: Liza Antony



Visitors:
An older hiker wanted to know what we were looking at and I discussed raptor migration in fall. A young man wanted to know whether we could see the faces of the paragliders. I offered my scope and 3 of them enjoyed the view offered, and were impressed by the scope clarity, looking at the modern Icaruses. While we were looking at a GE in describing it to each other, a woman wanted to know what we were looking at â€" I told her while looking through the scope, and asked if any of them could see it, and none of them could, even young men and women.

Weather:
Excellent cumulus clouds 70-85% in all directions, winds from the ESE>E, Temperature 12-9°C, humidity 20-26%, barometric pressure 29.92, clear visibility initially 19 km with some haze gradually increasing to 39 km, but we could not see Mount Blue Sky all day for haziness.

Raptor Observations:
Adult GE migrants at 12:31 and 2:03 PM. Every migrant raptor was seen today only over the eastern one third of Lookout Mountain, though we scanned in all directions, particularly to the north and west. Perhaps they were using ridge lift off Lookout Mountain. It was puzzling/frustrating that we could not see them overhead or further north â€" if there had been a stream of birds we could have followed them and found the channel they were Flying through. It did not appear that any migrants were flying to the east where we had seen most of migrants in September and early October. Non-migrant raptors: At 11:26 AM MST, I saw an adult GE far to the NW being chased by an RT likely an 'escort' as it flew back North, the GE continue South but unfortunately dropped below a ridge and was lost to our sight â€" it may have been a migrant but we did not count it; at 11:50 AM we saw a GE flying north from a little further south, likely the same one. At 1:15 PM found another GE to the SW flying north. BE adult 1. RT 7.

Non-raptor Observations:
Townsend's Solitaire 1, Common Raven 11, American Crow 10. Today was the day for paragliders â€" we saw 16, as well as 1 hang glider â€" all of whom had quite good lift.

Predictions:
Snow until after 10 AM with light NNE winds and sub-zero windchill. NNE winds will be new for me at this watch. This should provide southward migrants with a partial tailwind, as well as pushing any migrants flying more to the east toward the watch, so it will be interesting to see what I can see/find.


Report submitted by Ajit Antony (aiantony@earthlink.net)
More information at hawkcount.org: [Site Profile] [Day Summary] [Month Summary]




Directions to site:
From I-70 from Northeast Denver, take Route 58, then a left turn going south on
Route 6, the 1st exit is for Lookout Mountain Road, turn right and follow the
clothes to find Windy Saddle Park parking lot on the right.
From I-70 from points west of Denver, take the Lookout Mountain Road and follow
it to the Windy Saddle Park parking lot, a longer route.


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Saturday 2 November 2024

[cobirds] Pueblo birds 11/02

It was another good day at Pueblo Reaervoir.  John Drummond and I were looking for the adult winter plumage Black-legged Kittiwake mid morning, and found two near each other!  Luckily one flew in and landed fairly close for the DFO Field Trip.  Other things of note today at Pueblo Reservoir, Sabine's Gull, Pacific Loon, Red-necked Grebe, 4 Lesser Black-backed Gulls.  Early in the morning, I saw one Yellow-bellied Sapsucker at Pueblo City Park and a flyover Eastern Bluebird.  

Other birders saw 6 White-winged Scoters at South Marina at Pueblo Reservoir late in the day and a male Pine Warbler at Pueblo City Park this afternoon.

With some unsettled weather coming this week, there should be some more interesting birds around soon.

Good birding,
Brandon K. Percival
Pueblo West, CO


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[cobirds] WE WILL SEE ALL THE GOOD BIRDS TOMORROW IN LAFAYETTE!

Hey, everybody.

Please join us tomorrow, Sun., Nov. 3, 2024, for "Lafayette Birds!" The outing, free and open to the public, gets underway at 1pm MST. We start at The Shack at Greenlee Wildlife Preserve, then bird around the preserve, nearby Waneka Lake, and, for those who are up for a bit of a walk, Hecla Pond.

All are welcome. Families, newbies, and curiosity-seekers especially welcome. No RSVP necessary. Just show up. Bring Halloween candy to share. Give Art R. a piece of your mind; ask Dave M. about the epistemological subdiscipline of Pyrrhonist fallibilism; and, if there's a rare bird, get out of Lindsey W.'s way!

Birds that have been seen at Greenlee & environs in the past week include: brown thrasher, white-throated sparrow, h
ermit thrush, Wilson snipe, hooded merganser, bufflehead, American bushtit, cheddar waxwing, brown creeper, pine siskin, and rubicon kinglet.

Hope to see you tomorrow!

Ted Floyd
Lafayette, Boulder Co.

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Re: [cobirds] Re: RFI: Steller's Sea Eagle

All,

The famous one is living in Newfoundland now. Eagles can look crazy big to the uninitiated,  but a Steller's is half again as big as a Bald Eagle.

Mark Miller
now in Beaverton, OR


On Sat, Nov 2, 2024, 11:22 AM David Foley <dwfoley2@gmail.com> wrote:
John, I'm a Florida resident with a daughter in Greeley. My wife and I were in Colorado over the July 4th weekend in 2023 and into the following week. This was only our third visit to Greeley, or Colorado. Our daughter drove us to the Denver airport for  our return flight. She doesn't let me drive when we're together because whenever I see a new bird (and they're all new to me out there) I pull off the road abruptly and without warning. Apparently, that bothers some people. From my seat in the back of the car I saw a large raptor with white shoulders on top of a tall telephone pole. I didn't know what I was looking at. I wanted to shout, "Stop the car!" But I've been warned not to do that either. So, I convinced myself that when I got back home I could find this very distinct raptor in one of my guidebooks (still slow to turn to eBird). Well, you can imagine my surprise when I discovered there's only one bird that really fits that description. But there were no sighting closer than Texas, so I just thought I must have been wrong. And I probably was. But I did check the news that week to see if the Denver Zoo had lost theirs. No one reported an escape. Still, every once in a while ever since I search google for "stellar sea eagle" and "colorado." That's how I found your post. So, I thought I'd join the group and risk putting this out there. I'm with T. Luke George – it would be a surprise if no one else noticed ... maybe ...

On Friday, June 16, 2023 at 11:07:14 AM UTC-4 John Shenot wrote:
I spoke this morning with a not-very-serious birder who saw a very large bird in fall of 2020 at Dixon Reservoir (Larimer) that he struggled to ID. He claimed to be familiar with Bald and Golden Eagles, including immatures, and Ospreys. Saying he felt sure it was not one of those, he looked around on the internet but the only thing he could find that looked right was Steller's Sea Eagle - a species he learned had never been observed anywhere remotely close to this part of the world. He convinced himself it couldn't be that, it had to be something else like a "mutant bald eagle", and let the mystery fade. Until he learned about the vagrant sea eagle seen that year in Alaska (before his mystery bird sighting) and Texas (after his sighting).

FWIW, his description of the bird he saw matched the field marks for Steller's Sea Eagle. I don't know the guy but he didn't strike me as a hoaxer, or someone seeking glory.

I'm only posting this to ask if anyone else ever heard anecdotal stories or speculation about that famous sea eagle perhaps migrating across/over Colorado? Obviously there are no documented sightings but I didn't know if there were any rumors?

And finally, the fun part: this guy says he had pictures but his hard drive died. He is trying to find a part so he can restore the hard drive. If he succeeds with that, and shares a photo, I'll let this community know of course. Until then, it's just an intriguing story.

John Shenot
Fort Collins, CO

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[cobirds] Re: RFI: Steller's Sea Eagle

John, I'm a Florida resident with a daughter in Greeley. My wife and I were in Colorado over the July 4th weekend in 2023 and into the following week. This was only our third visit to Greeley, or Colorado. Our daughter drove us to the Denver airport for  our return flight. She doesn't let me drive when we're together because whenever I see a new bird (and they're all new to me out there) I pull off the road abruptly and without warning. Apparently, that bothers some people. From my seat in the back of the car I saw a large raptor with white shoulders on top of a tall telephone pole. I didn't know what I was looking at. I wanted to shout, "Stop the car!" But I've been warned not to do that either. So, I convinced myself that when I got back home I could find this very distinct raptor in one of my guidebooks (still slow to turn to eBird). Well, you can imagine my surprise when I discovered there's only one bird that really fits that description. But there were no sighting closer than Texas, so I just thought I must have been wrong. And I probably was. But I did check the news that week to see if the Denver Zoo had lost theirs. No one reported an escape. Still, every once in a while ever since I search google for "stellar sea eagle" and "colorado." That's how I found your post. So, I thought I'd join the group and risk putting this out there. I'm with T. Luke George – it would be a surprise if no one else noticed ... maybe ...

On Friday, June 16, 2023 at 11:07:14 AM UTC-4 John Shenot wrote:
I spoke this morning with a not-very-serious birder who saw a very large bird in fall of 2020 at Dixon Reservoir (Larimer) that he struggled to ID. He claimed to be familiar with Bald and Golden Eagles, including immatures, and Ospreys. Saying he felt sure it was not one of those, he looked around on the internet but the only thing he could find that looked right was Steller's Sea Eagle - a species he learned had never been observed anywhere remotely close to this part of the world. He convinced himself it couldn't be that, it had to be something else like a "mutant bald eagle", and let the mystery fade. Until he learned about the vagrant sea eagle seen that year in Alaska (before his mystery bird sighting) and Texas (after his sighting).

FWIW, his description of the bird he saw matched the field marks for Steller's Sea Eagle. I don't know the guy but he didn't strike me as a hoaxer, or someone seeking glory.

I'm only posting this to ask if anyone else ever heard anecdotal stories or speculation about that famous sea eagle perhaps migrating across/over Colorado? Obviously there are no documented sightings but I didn't know if there were any rumors?

And finally, the fun part: this guy says he had pictures but his hard drive died. He is trying to find a part so he can restore the hard drive. If he succeeds with that, and shares a photo, I'll let this community know of course. Until then, it's just an intriguing story.

John Shenot
Fort Collins, CO

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