Sunday, 3 May 2026

[cobirds] Dinosaur Ridge - Denver Field Ornithologists (03 May 2026) 14 Raptors

Dinosaur Ridge - Denver Field Ornithologists
Golden, Colorado, USA

Daily Raptor Counts: May 03, 2026
Species Day's Count Month Total Season Total
Black Vulture 0 0 0
Turkey Vulture 1 10 172
Osprey 1 3 67
Bald Eagle 0 1 28
Northern Harrier 0 1 51
Sharp-shinned Hawk 0 4 199
Cooper's Hawk 5 13 262
American Goshawk 0 0 2
Red-shouldered Hawk 0 0 0
Broad-winged Hawk 2 16 96
Red-tailed Hawk 4 11 473
Rough-legged Hawk 0 0 0
Swainson's Hawk 1 1 53
Ferruginous Hawk 0 0 17
Golden Eagle 0 0 8
American Kestrel 0 6 702
Merlin 0 0 7
Peregrine Falcon 0 0 10
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 68 2190


Observation start time: 06:15:00
Observation end time: 17:00:00
Total observation time: 10.75 hours
Official Counter Soren Zappia
Observers:



Visitors:
15 visitors. We had some new visitors today as well as a few regulars! Thank you to Andrew Jensen for volunteering today and keeping an eye on all those Cooper's Hawks.

Weather:
It was a cloudy day today with complete cover for the duration of the day. In the morning, the cloud cover was thick, but it became thinner in areas as the day progressed. Temperatures were in the 50s F in the early morning (pre 9 MST) but were in the 60s to low 70s F for the duration of the regular count hours. Winds were light and variable but mostly from the southwest. Around 4:00 MST, there was a brief period of intense NW winds likely associated with a passing front, sustained at 5 bft and seeming to gust at 8+ bft. After about 5 minutes, winds returned to calm at 1 bft.

Raptor Observations:
It was a steady May day, with lots of songbirds and a few raptors on the move. We counted two Broad-winged Hawks in the morning, within a few minutes of each other. One came directly overhead while the other took a low line on the west. A few Red-tailed Hawks, especially juveniles, came throughout the day. In the afternoon we also saw a high Swainson's Hawk. Bird activity was quiet in the final few hours of the count. Local Cooper's Hawks were quite active, and we saw a juvenile in the early am roaming around as well as two adults. We had a few migrant Cooper's Hawks as well, but no Sharp-shinned Hawks today. Songbird migration was busy in the late morning, with fifty Yellow-rumped Warblers, a few small groups of Blue Jays, and Chipping Sparrows as the most common migrants. A Ruby-crowned Kinglet was spotted in a tree on the ridge.

Non-raptor Observations:
White-throated Swift 50, hummingbird sp 1, Broad-tailed Hummingbird 2, Mourning Dove 2, Double-crested Cormorant 2, Northern Flicker 1, Say's Phoebe 1, Blue Jay 8, Woodhouse's Scrub Jay 1, Black-billed Magpie 2, Common Raven 3, Violet-green Swallow 45, Northern Rough-winged Swallow 1, Cliff Swallow 1, swalow sp. 5, Ruby-crowned Kinglet 1, Rock Wren 1, House Wren 1, Blue-grey Gnatcatcher 3, Red-breasted Nuthatch 1, European Starling 3, Mountain Bluebird 1, House Finch 2, American Goldfinch 1, Pine Siskin 7, Chipping Sparrow 20, Spotted Towhee 3, Western Meadowlark 2, blackbird sp. 6, Common Grackle 4, Yellow-rumped Warbler 37, Yellow-rumped Warbler (Audubon's) 8, Yellow-rumped Warbler (Myrtle) 5, passerine sp. 1, warbler sp. 4

Predictions:
Tomorrow, thunderstorms are predicted in the afternoon, but the morning forecast is partly cloudy with light to moderate winds from the northwest. A baby rattlesnake was spotted just off of the Hawkwatch platform. Take care when hiking up the trails.


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] New Chico Basin Gate - El Paso + Pueblo Counties

Birders,

Anyone visiting Chico in the next 10+ days will see a temporary gate at the ranch entrance.
Please read what the ranch manager has to say about entering the ranch:

"We are going to have to put a drive through gate at the ranch entrance for about 10 days. Unfortunately some of our steers are jumping the cattle guard to get with some neighboring cattle. The gate is designed to slowly drive through, pushing it open with the front of your vehicle. It is designed not to scratch or otherwise damage a vehicle, but if someone is nervous about it they can use the gates next to the cattle guard."

Thank you for your patience.

Linda Hodges
Aiken Audubon

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Re: [cobirds] Hummingbird Banding Question

Scott Rashid from CARRI bands hummingbirds.  His contact can be found on CARRI's website: https://www.carriep.org/

Sent from my iPad

On May 3, 2026, at 6:43 AM, Timothy Condon <timothycondonrn@gmail.com> wrote:


I am a trip leader with the Denver Field Ornithologist, and was wondering if anybody knew of anyone who did hummingbird banding in the Denver area. I would like to organize a trip for people to see this as part of the DFO Summer Hummers theme. Thank you in advance for any information you can provide. 


--
Tim Condon
He/Him
303-717-1836

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Re: [cobirds] Louisiana Waterthrush - SE Denver - Belleview and DTC Blvd

Thank you so much for this great find! Still there this morning til 9 when I left.

Best,

Rosanne Juergens 


On Sun, May 3, 2026, 6:44 AM Laura Eley <lauraeley@gmail.com> wrote:
Yesterday evening I discovered a Lousiana Waterthrush at Wallace Park. It was still there this morning, if you'd like to go see it!

I had decided to give myself a little personal challenge in May and visit 'unvisited' eBird hotspots, just to give those hotspots some data and attention, and move them over to the 'visited' group for a bit. So my boyfriend and I went on a walk at Wallace park last night. I told him not to bother bringing his camera, as I expected we would just see Robins and Magpies. So he didn't.

In the concrete waterway under Belleview, I spotted a little bird running about in the water and thought, that seems like a special bird for this location. I took a couple pictures with my phone through my binoculars. My first thought was Dipper, but I looked it up in my phone field guides and quickly ruled it out. 

Merlin was no help. It couldn't pick up the little 'cheep' sound it was making. It couldn't figure out what bird was in my photo when I put it through photo ID. I did the step by step ID and got nowhere. A mystery!

I came home and looked through my big field guides at ALL the sandpipers. I finally thought, "well, it's not exactly right, but Spotted Sandpiper seems like the most likely. Maybe it's some kind of morph or juvenile that there isn't a picture of in my guide." 

Posted my photo to the CFO facebook group and discovered it was a waterthrush!! A warbler!? What! I never! 

Then I learned, it's a very rare-for-Colorado Louisiana Waterthrush!! So this morning my boyfriend grabbed his camera and joined a dozen other guys with their cameras under the bridge and we confirmed it is a Louisiana Waterthrush and he got his pictures and wasn't upset anymore about missing getting a picture of a rare bird.

I love learning about birds. Never would I ever have thought to look through the warbler section for this bird! Thank you to the people on the facebook group, the people at the bird this morning, and broadly, the people on this email list who have helped me on this bird and learning about birds and birding in the past. I'm excited to have made this discovery, and it was just because I wanted to bird some 'underbirded' areas this month. And I have learned so much!!! 

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[cobirds] Osprey Nesting Platform

Last Tuesday I had an Osprey nesting platform installed on my property across from Highland Lake near Mead, Weld County, CO. Today, it was visited by a female Osprey who spent about an hour rearranging twigs and just hanging out.

I'm really excited about this as I had no idea that there would be any action of any kind this year. I thought it was too late.

Pauli Smith
Highlandlake/Mead, Weld County
Uploaded Image Uploaded Image Uploaded Image

Re: [cobirds] eclipse plumage, etc.

Ted et al
One of my Colorado mentors, Dr. Ron Ryder , used to always point out rooks nest in “rookeries”, herons nest in “heronries”.

I’ll leave this erudite discussion of feathering to you folks.

I have to go pin up the assortment of insects the Blackburnian was getting from honeylocust leaves/flowers at Fairmount Cemetery in Lamar yesterday.

Dave Leatherman


From: cobirds@googlegroups.com <cobirds@googlegroups.com> on behalf of Ted Floyd <tedfloyd73@gmail.com>
Sent: Saturday, May 2, 2026 1:10:50 PM
To: Colorado Birds <cobirds@googlegroups.com>
Subject: [cobirds] eclipse plumage, etc.
 
Hey, all.

First off, thanks for the great Mexican Duck conversation. The take-home message, at least as I am receiving it, is: Let's get out there and document Mexican Ducks, candidate Mexican Ducks, Mexican–like ducks, and whatnot. Brilliant. Bring it on. Together we'll advance our knowledge of the status & distribution of diazi genes in Colorado.

With that out of the way, this, from Tony:

"Finally, a little bit of a deviation from the subject: A plea to birders to quit using the phrase 'eclipse plumage.' Ducks are no different from all other Colorado species in conducting a substantial molt as adults after breeding. There is no reason to call the post-breeding molt of Mallards one thing and that of Yellow-rumped Warblers... and Spotted Sandpipers, Bobolinks, Swainson's Hawks, California Gulls, and Lazuli Buntings another thing. The only real difference is that ducks hold that 'Basic Plumage' for a much shorter portion of the calendar year. But it's the same molt.'"

So, unless there's been a big recent disclosure that I'm not aware of (could be!), that's not right. It's *not* the same molt. Contra everything we were taught in the benighted 20th century, the "dull plumage" (Tony, I'm doing your bidding, but see below ðŸ˜ˆ) in most Colorado ducks, is in fact the *alternate* plumage. Not the basic plumage. Here is a link to Peter Pyle's seminal 2005 paper on the topic:

birdpop.org/docs/pubs/Pyle_2005_Molts_and_Plumages_of_Ducks.pdf

Okay, now let's talk about that "dull plumage." The eclipse plumage. (Leukering prepares to commit self-defenestration...) If I'm hearing Tony right, I fully & completely agree with half of what he is saying, viz., that it is an excellent idea to understand molts & plumages. For starters, it's pragmatic: Such knowledge can be valuable in identifying birds to species. It is also essential for even beginning to attempt to age birds correctly. (Which, to complete the circle, brings us back to species-level identification. Because you can't identify summer dowitchers in Colorado without first knowing how old they are, which requires an assessment of molts & plumages).

That said, I don't object to the term "eclipse plumage." We have all sorts of taxon-specific phraseology like that. Hawks have eyries, and herons have rookeries; but we we don't have similar words, as far as I am aware, for the nests of shrikes and blackbirds. Formative kittiwakes are tarrocks, and fledgling turkeys are poults; but we don't have similar words for, say, loons and woodpeckers. The progeny of Callipepla squamata x C. gambelii are Scrambled Quail; but we don't have an analogous name for the hybrid young of presumptive Mourning x MacGillivray's warbler pairings. Words like eyrie, tarrock, and Scrambled don't get in the way of understanding "nest," "formative," and "hybrid," and I don't think "eclipse" gets in the way of understanding that the dull plumage of most Colorado waterfowl is, surprisingly, the alternate plumage.

Ted Floyd
Lafayette, Boulder Co.

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Re: [cobirds] Osprey Nesting Platform

Lets hear it for Pauli & the Ospreys! 

Diane Roberts
Highlands Ranch

On Sun, May 3, 2026 at 4:35 PM Pauli Driver-Smith <hollyhockfarms@msn.com> wrote:
Last Tuesday I had an Osprey nesting platform installed on my property across from Highland Lake near Mead, Weld County, CO. Today, it was visited by a female Osprey who spent about an hour rearranging twigs and just hanging out.

I'm really excited about this as I had no idea that there would be any action of any kind this year. I thought it was too late.

Pauli Smith
Highlandlake/Mead, Weld County

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