Sunday, 10 May 2026

[cobirds] Chatfield Banding Station, Bird Conservancy of the Rockies 5-10-26

Another good day for us, with a nice variety of species and 2 notables.  First, we caught a rare for us Northern Parula.  Second, we recaptured a Lincoln's Sparrow that we banded in 2024; it is extremely rare to recapture a bird that is not known to breed at Chatfield, and thus was passing through (again) on migration.

The last four days have been great, after the slow, although fairly typical, start to the season.  Volunteers and visitors can't stop smiling!  Sorry we are closed tomorrow!

Here's the breakdown of today's 41 new and 5 returns:

Dusky Flycatcher 2
Northern House Wren 7
Swainson's Thrush 1 FOS
Hermit Thrush 1
Gray Catbird 2 FOS
Orange-crowned Warbler 2
Northern Parula 1 FOS (and probably only!)
Yellow Warbler 4 new, 3 returns (1 banded in 2021 as an adult, and recaught each year since! 1 banded in 2023 and 1 in 2024)
Yellow-rumped Warbler, Myrtle 2
Yellow-rumped Warbler, Audubon's 5
MacGillivray's Warbler 2
Common Yellowthroat 3
Wilson's Warbler 3
Yellow-breasted Chat 1 new, 1 banded 2024
Green-tailed Towhee 1 FOS
Lincoln's Sparrow 2 new, 1 see comment above
White-crowned Sparrow, Gambel's 1
Red-winged Blackbird 1

We are banding Tuesday through Sunday (closed Mondays) through May 31, weather permitting.  There are opportunities for the public to visit on weekends and early mornings most weekdays.  Reservations are required and can be made through the Denver Audubon website.  (Many/most sessions are already sold out, so sign up now if you are interested!)

Meredith McBurney
Bander, Bird Conservancy of the Rockies

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[cobirds] Dinosaur Ridge - Denver Field Ornithologists (10 May 2026) 14 Raptors

Dinosaur Ridge - Denver Field Ornithologists
Golden, Colorado, USA

Daily Raptor Counts: May 10, 2026
Species Day's Count Month Total Season Total
Black Vulture 0 0 0
Turkey Vulture 1 17 179
Osprey 0 4 68
Bald Eagle 0 1 28
Northern Harrier 0 1 51
Sharp-shinned Hawk 2 19 214
Cooper's Hawk 3 28 277
American Goshawk 0 0 2
Red-shouldered Hawk 0 0 0
Broad-winged Hawk 1 19 99
Red-tailed Hawk 5 24 486
Rough-legged Hawk 0 0 0
Swainson's Hawk 0 5 57
Ferruginous Hawk 0 0 17
Golden Eagle 0 0 8
American Kestrel 2 20 716
Merlin 0 0 7
Peregrine Falcon 0 1 11
Prairie Falcon 0 0 4
Mississippi Kite 0 0 0
Unknown Accipitrine 0 0 22
Unknown Buteo 0 0 5
Unknown Falcon 0 0 5
Unknown Eagle 0 0 0
Unknown Raptor 0 1 6
Zone-tailed Hawk 0 1 1
Total: 14 141 2263


Observation start time: 09:00:00
Observation end time: 17:00:00
Total observation time: 8 hours
Official Counter Emma Riley, Soren Zappia
Observers:



Visitors:
Today brought a fantastic number of visitors to the site due to it being Mother’s Day. We had a total of 60 visitors! Many families enjoyed learning about raptor migration and trying to spot one of our local birds. We owe a massive thank you to Cayce and Chris Gulbransen for volunteering today and for so much this season. Your help has been priceless! Thank you Janet Peters for hiking empanadas up to the ridge today, this is our favorite end of year tradition. Thank you to Caroline Fegley for coming down from Laramie to help us count birds! We could list everyone out that has been involved and thank them but it will be much more concise to extend our deepest gratitude to everyone who has been involved in the 2026 count season. We appreciate every volunteer, committee member, donor, and curious visitor. It has been a great year and we are looking forward to the next!

Weather:
It was a beautiful May day with blue skies and minimal cloud cover. Temperatures were warm but not too hot, and there was a nice breeze from the E.

Raptor Observations:
Well, we've done it again. That's a wrap on the 2026 season! Already! We had a nice last day of migration today with birds steadily coming throughout the day, mostly overhead high and W along the west ridge. We had one final Broad-winged Hawk, bringing our total for the year to 99 BW. This year was our highest year ever at this site for observer hours, thanks to our dedicated counters Soren Zappia and Emma Riley. We only had three full weather cancellations this season which aided in this record. Let's talk birds! This season was our 2nd highest Osprey count since 2000, 2nd highest Northern Harrier count since 2005, our 3rd highest Swainson's Hawk count ever, and our 2nd highest American Kestrel count since 1997. We had notably low counts on Turkey Vultures, Golden Eagles, Bald Eagles, and Ferruginous Hawks. We have speculated on the reason for this, and we wonder if a warm winter and less than ideal winds during peak season impacted the movements of these birds. Overall, this season was the second lowest count that we’ve had since Denver Field Ornithologists took over this count site. We value all data collection that happens here, and look forward to analysis that can help us understand these populations and how to best conserve them. Thank you all for another great season!

Non-raptor Observations:
White-throated Swift 2, Broad-tailed Hummingbird 2, Mourning Dove 2, Northern Flicker 1, Say's Phoebe 1, Western Kingbird 1, Blue Jay 1, Woodhouse's Scrub Jay 2, Common Raven 3, Violet-green Swallow 6, Northern Rough-winged Swallow 1, Barn Swallow 1, Cliff Swallow 5, American Bushtit 4, Rock Wren 2, Blue-grey Gnatcatcher 3, American Robin 1, Lesser Goldfinch 1, Pine Siskin 2, Spotted Towhee 3, Western Meadowlark 1, Brown-headed Cowbird 2, Virginia's Warbler 1, Yellow-rumped Warbler (Audubon's) 1, Lazuli Bunting 1, passerine sp. 2


Report submitted by Official Counter of the day shown above (dinoridgehw@gmail.com)
Dinosaur Ridge - Denver Field Ornithologists information may be found at: www.dinosaurridgehawkwatch.org
More information at hawkcount.org: [Site Profile] [Day Summary] [Month Summary]
Count data submitted via Trektellen.org - [Project Details]




Site Description
Dinosaur Ridge is the only regularly staffed hawk watch in Colorado and is the
best place in the world to see migrating Ferruginous Hawks. Hawk watchers may
see 17 species of migrating raptors; and it is an excellent site to see rare
dark morph buteos including Broad-winged hawk, Swainson's hawk, Ferruginous
hawk, Rough-legged hawk and Red-tailed Hawk. Other raptors we see include Golden
and Bald Eagles, Northern harrier, Osprey, Peregrine Falcons, Prairie Falcons,
Cooper's and Sharp-shinned Hawks, American Kestrels, Merlin, and Turkey
Vultures. American Goshawk is uncommon but also counted each season. Non-raptor
species include Rock Wren, Bushtit, Western Bluebird, Sandhill Crane,
White-throated Swift, and American White Pelican. Birders of any skill level are
always welcome. The hawk watch at Dinosaur Ridge is staffed by Hawk Counter(s)
and volunteers from March through early May.

Directions to site:
From exit 259 on I-70 towards Morrison, drive south under freeway and take left
into first parking lot, the Stegosaurus lot. Follow hawk watch signs from the
southwest end of the parking lot to the hawk watch site. The hike starts heading
east on an old two-track and quickly turns south onto a trail on the west side
of the ridge. When the trail nears the top of the ridge, turn left, and walk to
the flat area at the crest of the ridge. (Distance: 0.56 miles, Elevation gain:
259 feet)

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[cobirds] Re: ID help for owl - Larimer

Thank you. I agree and have changed my ebird checklist. Admittedly, I have been hoping for a good look at a Barn Owl, and originally wished it so. I've seen young GH once before when they had no flight feathers. Though the body on this one looked a bit too fluffy, the wing feathers were fully formed, huge, and uniform grey. That was what probably threw me off. I suppose the awkward movement in the tree to change branches also should have been a clue. Still learning.


On Sunday, May 10, 2026 at 8:50:16 AM UTC-6 Tony Leukering wrote:
Ron:

The bird is probably a recently fledged Great Horned Owl (like this one in British Columbia ( ML99368691 - Great Horned Owl - Macaulay Library) and this one in Colorado ( ML635710085 - Great Horned Owl - Macaulay Library). The species begins sitting on eggs in winter and fledge youngsters in spring.

Enjoy,

Tony Leukering
Cut Bank, MT

On Saturday, May 9, 2026 at 3:33:31 PM UTC-6 ronbco wrote:
I was at Lon Hagler Res in Larimer County late in the day. There are plenty of trees on the west end. An owl was in a cottonwood. I had a clear view of it for a few seconds before it started awkwardly finding a different perch more hidden. Generally, the only owl sp one would expect here is Great Horned. But this was not that. No ear tufts, Quite a stout body including neck. Wings were grey and unmarked on the top sides. They were very broad and long. The bird turned and faced me once while I had bins on it and the face was a disk, but not heart-shaped, with big bright yellow eyes and striking coloring on the face.
So, wrong face and coloring for barn owl, and plus it was no where near dark yet.
No ear tufts, so not long-eared, and more bulky than GH.
All I can conclude is Short-eared. But that would be pretty unusual in this location?

Thanks
Ron Bolton
Berthoud

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[cobirds] Re: And now there are two!

I shouldn't have worried. A strong wind came up last night and detached and blew the cords away. One Osprey was on the perch and the other was circling around above and over the lake. I heard my first Osprey call this morning.

Pauli Smith
Highlandlake/Mead, Weld County

From: cobirds@googlegroups.com <cobirds@googlegroups.com> on behalf of Pauli Driver-Smith <hollyhockfarms@msn.com>
Sent: Friday, May 8, 2026 4:55 PM
To: cobirds <cobirds@googlegroups.com>
Subject: [cobirds] And now there are two!
 
There is another problem, though. They brought in some tangled bungee cords. It is hanging from the side of the platform. I think the hook on one end is attached to the top of the platform.

I had a lot of trees limbs come down in the storm, so I asked the tree trimmer if while he has his bucket crane here could he unhook it. He said that his license won't allow it because they are predatory birds. I thought that only mattered once they start nesting, not before they lay any eggs? I don't know if they are even going to nest this year. They haven't made a lot of progress on their nest yet, and it is getting rather late.

What do you all think? Do you know anyone in the Mead area with a cherry picker that can grab the bungee cord?

Pauli Smith
Highlandlake/Mead, Weld County, CO.

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[cobirds] Re: ID help for owl - Larimer

Ron:

The bird is probably a recently fledged Great Horned Owl (like this one in British Columbia ( ML99368691 - Great Horned Owl - Macaulay Library) and this one in Colorado ( ML635710085 - Great Horned Owl - Macaulay Library). The species begins sitting on eggs in winter and fledge youngsters in spring.

Enjoy,

Tony Leukering
Cut Bank, MT

On Saturday, May 9, 2026 at 3:33:31 PM UTC-6 ronbco wrote:
I was at Lon Hagler Res in Larimer County late in the day. There are plenty of trees on the west end. An owl was in a cottonwood. I had a clear view of it for a few seconds before it started awkwardly finding a different perch more hidden. Generally, the only owl sp one would expect here is Great Horned. But this was not that. No ear tufts, Quite a stout body including neck. Wings were grey and unmarked on the top sides. They were very broad and long. The bird turned and faced me once while I had bins on it and the face was a disk, but not heart-shaped, with big bright yellow eyes and striking coloring on the face.
So, wrong face and coloring for barn owl, and plus it was no where near dark yet.
No ear tufts, so not long-eared, and more bulky than GH.
All I can conclude is Short-eared. But that would be pretty unusual in this location?

Thanks
Ron Bolton
Berthoud

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Saturday, 9 May 2026

[cobirds] Chatfield Banding Station, Bird Conservancy of the Rockies 5-9-26

We had another good day.....steady stream of birds all morning, resulting in the capture of 38 new birds and 3 returns of 19 species:

Mourning Dove 1 FOS
Downy Woodpecker 1 banded 2025
Dusky Flycatcher 1 FOS
Black-capped Chickadee 1
Northern House Wren 10
American Robin 1
Orange-crowned Warbler 1
Yellow Warbler 3
Yellow-rumped Warbler, Myrtle 2
Yellow-rumped Warbler, Audubon's 1
Common Yellowthroat 6
Wilson's Warbler 1
Yellow-breasted Chat 1 new, 1 banded 2023, recaught 2024, 2025
Spotted Towhee 2 new, 1 banded fall of 2025
Brewer's Sparrow 1 FOS
Lincoln's Sparrow 2
White-crowned Sparrow, Gambel's 1
Red-winged Blackbird 1
American Goldfinch 2

We are banding Tuesday through Sunday (closed Mondays) through May 31, weather permitting.  There are opportunities for the public to visit on weekends and early mornings most weekdays.  Reservations are required and can be made through the Denver Audubon website.  (Many/most sessions are already sold out, so sign up now if you are interested!)

Meredith McBurney
Bander, Bird Conservancy of the Rockies

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[cobirds] ID help for owl - Larimer

I was at Lon Hagler Res in Larimer County late in the day. There are plenty of trees on the west end. An owl was in a cottonwood. I had a clear view of it for a few seconds before it started awkwardly finding a different perch more hidden. Generally, the only owl sp one would expect here is Great Horned. But this was not that. No ear tufts, Quite a stout body including neck. Wings were grey and unmarked on the top sides. They were very broad and long. The bird turned and faced me once while I had bins on it and the face was a disk, but not heart-shaped, with big bright yellow eyes and striking coloring on the face.
So, wrong face and coloring for barn owl, and plus it was no where near dark yet.
No ear tufts, so not long-eared, and more bulky than GH.
All I can conclude is Short-eared. But that would be pretty unusual in this location?

Thanks
Ron Bolton
Berthoud

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