Wednesday, 11 February 2026

[cobirds] Standley Lake Gull Bonanza

Hi all, 

Following up on a few recent reports of gulls from Standley Lake (including a Glaucous Gull by Jack Bushong yesterday evening), I made the trip late this evening. I encountered an absolute absurd number of gulls (spread out across four flocks, ranging in size from 1200 to 3200 birds). I estimated the total number of gulls on the reservoir to be around 6400 individuals. In these flocks, I tallied 27 Lesser Black-backed Gulls, 14 Iceland Gulls, an estimate of 125 Herring, and 3200 Ring-billed. I also could not identify to species the largest flock which was too far out. Also, of interest, I had a first year Glaucous-winged Gull fly by at close distance chasing an adult LBBG. Unfortunately, I spent too much time watching the bird through my scope and binoculars, and by the time I had my camera out the bird had passed through towards the NE corner. 

I want to get the word out as this might be the largest group of gulls I have ever seen at one place in Colorado (outside of maybe Aurora Reservoir years ago), and in hopes of anyone re-finding the Glaucous-winged, as well as any other rare individuals (I'm sure there were more out there). 

Hopefully more people can venture out here in the coming days. I parked here (39°51'19.4"N 105°06'29.3"W) and walked out to here (39°51'24.2"N 105°06'33.5"W) to scan. I suggest getting here around 4:00 p.m., as it seems the gulls really only arrive in the evening. I left at 5:32 and the birds were still active. 

Cheers, and good birding!

Ryan Bushong
Louisville, Colorado

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[cobirds] CFO Speaker Series - Feather Trails with Sophie A.H. Osborn (Thurs., Feb 26)

CFO's Dead of Winter Knowledge Quest continues with award-winning environmental writer and wildlife biologist Sophie A.H. Osborn.

Birds are visible, vocal sentinels that alert us to environmental harms through their declining numbers or their failure to thrive. In her book Feather Trails—A Journey of Discovery Among Endangered Birds, Sophie Osborn shares her personal experiences reintroducing endangered Peregrine Falcons, Hawaiian Crows, and California Condors to the wild. While immersing readers in the triumphs and tribulations of being a wildlife biologist, Sophie explores the threats that imperiled these birds, and reveals that what harmed them threatens us, too. She will discuss what led to the endangerment of these three captivating species, recount the efforts of biologists to recover their populations, and read a few excerpts from her book that describe what it was like to work with these magnificent birds.

This Zoom presentation takes place Thursday, February 26th from 7:00 to 8:00 pm. For more information and to register visit: https://cobirds.org/events/speaker-series-sophie-osborn/

Linda Lee
CFO Communications Chair
Louisville


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[cobirds] DFO Presents: Ted Floyd on the Rocky Mountain Arsenal NWR, Feb 23 at 7pm


Hi CoBirders,

Mark your calendars now and register for DFO's free Zoom webinar with Ted Floyd presenting, "The Wonders & Glories of Rocky Mountain Arsenal National Wildlife Refuge". 7pm on Monday, February 23. 
Register here

Whatever Ted -- Colorado birder-writer-educator and editor of Birding Magazine -- decides to show and tell about that improbably rich haven for birds, bison and other critters on the edge of urban Denver will be worth every minute. Readers of CoBirds will recall his great posts reporting on his visits to this favorite birding spot. 

David Suddjian
DFO Communications and Outreach 

Ted Floyd

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Re: [cobirds] Colorado now has 7 regular Hawk Migration Association Winter Raptor Surveys this season

Ajit (and Liza)
Thank for this write up. It was very interesting and helpful. 
Lynne Forrester 
Littleton,  Jeffco


From: cobirds@googlegroups.com <cobirds@googlegroups.com> on behalf of AJIT ANTONY <aiantony@earthlink.net>
Sent: Tuesday, February 10, 2026 7:32:18 PM
To: COBirds <cobirds@googlegroups.com>
Subject: [cobirds] Colorado now has 7 regular Hawk Migration Association Winter Raptor Surveys this season
 
I am happy to let you know that Colorado now has 7 regular Winter Raptor Surveys under the auspices of the HMA - Hawk Migration Association, formerly HMANA - Hawk Migration Association of North America.
Like Hawkcount, also managed by HMA, the data from these surveys can be used by researchers, so this is good citizen science.

Liza and I moved from New York to Denver in summer 2022. In New York State between the two of us we had 4 different Winter Raptor Surveys which we conducted as per the protocol of HMA once a month in December, January, and February. We had started doing them when we first heard of them in 2016. Once in Colorado we started 3 Winter Raptor Surveys in 2022 &ndash;
1. South and East Boulder,
2. Valmont Rd to Rabbit Mountain,
3. Rocky Mountain Arsenal NWR and the area West of Denver International Airport going up to Barr Lake,
4. Bennett to Jackson Lake, added in 2023.

Prior to 2022 there was a short lived WRS by Jillian and Patrick Glover and Deb Callahan in the St Luis Valley with 3 surveys between December 2019 and December 2020, but none since.

There is also an infrequent survey along NE I-76 conducted by the former coordinator of the WRS who lives in Illinois and who does this survey with her son whenever she visits a son in Colorado Springs, so that there are single surveys in 2019, 2021, 2023,and 2025.

The past few 4 years I had posted occasional reports in COBirds of some of the highlights of our WRS, encouraging Colorado birders to start their own WRS, including a link to the WRS website
Winter Raptor Survey &ndash; Hawk Migration Association (https://www.hawkmigration.org/winter-raptor-survey/) offering my help if needed.

Robert Beauchamp started his own survey starting in 2022 incorporating the Nunn Raptor Alley Route, and completed 9 surveys, the last of which was in February 2025, unfortunately none this winter season. I don&rsquo;t know him, I hope he is in good health.

This winter season looking at the Winter Raptors Survey website I was delighted to find that 3 new HMA WRS have been started in Colorado this winter season.
* Jeffco Foothills WRS by Audrey Hicks, Sharon Tanaka, Karolyn Chan, and Amy Walsh who have completed 2 surveys in December and January.
* El Paso County East of Colorado Springs WRS by Chris Nigro and Jennifer McLain who have completed 3 surveys in December and January. We we had thought it could be a productive area, but it was a little too far for us to go to.
* Arapahoe East WRS by Jason Zolle, Zak Hepler and Ryan Gannon who have completed 2 surveys in December and January.
Congratulations to all these birder surveyors, and may they continue their surveys into the future.

If you go to the WRS website https://wrs.hmana.org/public_html/index.php  if you click on Main In the left sidebar you can see all the surveys done this season all over the country.
If you want to hone in on Colorado, and especially see prior years surveys, click on Survey Map in the left sidebar, zoom in on the map to Colorado and click on one of the teardrop markers. You can then click on Survey Date and GO under the WRS Survey Summary and find all previous surveys. Each survey at the bottom of the page has Survey Totals by Species. Those who already have a WRS have additional access to notes on individual raptors on each survey.

Any birder or raptor enthusiast can do a Winter Raptor Survey on their own. It is a volunteer program. If you like raptors and know of an area with raptors you can develop your own route and follow it exactly the same way each time, as long as it doesn&rsquo;t overlap an established route. Just follow the guidelines on the website. If you want any questions answered you can email the WRS coordinator.

If anyone is interested in starting their own route and needs advice or help, please feel free to contact me.

If you&rsquo;re interested in starting one and don&rsquo;t know of an area where there are a lot of raptors, the best way to figure out where to create your route is what we did, which is to look at eBird data for the past1-5 years for the location you are interested in &ndash; look up sightings for FH,RL, PrF, and GE &ndash; which will give you where you could see numbers of individuals of interesting wintering raptor species.
The dirt roads North and South of I-70 from Limon eastward is a good area, so also the area of Loveland and Fort Collins.

You can get general and specific information about the WRS programat https://www.hmana.org/winter-raptor-survey/

If you do start a survey, you will find that you will learn a lot about wintering raptors especially their ID, as we have improved our ID skills since 2022. We had to learn all about Ferruginous Hawk, Prairie Falcon, and all dark morph raptors which are not found in the east.

Ajit I Antony
Central Park, Denver, CO

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Tuesday, 10 February 2026

[cobirds] Colorado now has 7 regular Hawk Migration Association Winter Raptor Surveys this season

I am happy to let you know that Colorado now has 7 regular Winter Raptor Surveys under the auspices of the HMA - Hawk Migration Association, formerly HMANA - Hawk Migration Association of North America.
Like Hawkcount, also managed by HMA, the data from these surveys can be used by researchers, so this is good citizen science.

Liza and I moved from New York to Denver in summer 2022. In New York State between the two of us we had 4 different Winter Raptor Surveys which we conducted as per the protocol of HMA once a month in December, January, and February. We had started doing them when we first heard of them in 2016. Once in Colorado we started 3 Winter Raptor Surveys in 2022 &ndash;
1. South and East Boulder,
2. Valmont Rd to Rabbit Mountain,
3. Rocky Mountain Arsenal NWR and the area West of Denver International Airport going up to Barr Lake,
4. Bennett to Jackson Lake, added in 2023.

Prior to 2022 there was a short lived WRS by Jillian and Patrick Glover and Deb Callahan in the St Luis Valley with 3 surveys between December 2019 and December 2020, but none since.

There is also an infrequent survey along NE I-76 conducted by the former coordinator of the WRS who lives in Illinois and who does this survey with her son whenever she visits a son in Colorado Springs, so that there are single surveys in 2019, 2021, 2023,and 2025.

The past few 4 years I had posted occasional reports in COBirds of some of the highlights of our WRS, encouraging Colorado birders to start their own WRS, including a link to the WRS website
Winter Raptor Survey &ndash; Hawk Migration Association (https://www.hawkmigration.org/winter-raptor-survey/) offering my help if needed.

Robert Beauchamp started his own survey starting in 2022 incorporating the Nunn Raptor Alley Route, and completed 9 surveys, the last of which was in February 2025, unfortunately none this winter season. I don&rsquo;t know him, I hope he is in good health.

This winter season looking at the Winter Raptors Survey website I was delighted to find that 3 new HMA WRS have been started in Colorado this winter season.
* Jeffco Foothills WRS by Audrey Hicks, Sharon Tanaka, Karolyn Chan, and Amy Walsh who have completed 2 surveys in December and January.
* El Paso County East of Colorado Springs WRS by Chris Nigro and Jennifer McLain who have completed 3 surveys in December and January. We we had thought it could be a productive area, but it was a little too far for us to go to.
* Arapahoe East WRS by Jason Zolle, Zak Hepler and Ryan Gannon who have completed 2 surveys in December and January.
Congratulations to all these birder surveyors, and may they continue their surveys into the future.

If you go to the WRS website https://wrs.hmana.org/public_html/index.php if you click on Main In the left sidebar you can see all the surveys done this season all over the country.
If you want to hone in on Colorado, and especially see prior years surveys, click on Survey Map in the left sidebar, zoom in on the map to Colorado and click on one of the teardrop markers. You can then click on Survey Date and GO under the WRS Survey Summary and find all previous surveys. Each survey at the bottom of the page has Survey Totals by Species. Those who already have a WRS have additional access to notes on individual raptors on each survey.

Any birder or raptor enthusiast can do a Winter Raptor Survey on their own. It is a volunteer program. If you like raptors and know of an area with raptors you can develop your own route and follow it exactly the same way each time, as long as it doesn&rsquo;t overlap an established route. Just follow the guidelines on the website. If you want any questions answered you can email the WRS coordinator.

If anyone is interested in starting their own route and needs advice or help, please feel free to contact me.

If you&rsquo;re interested in starting one and don&rsquo;t know of an area where there are a lot of raptors, the best way to figure out where to create your route is what we did, which is to look at eBird data for the past1-5 years for the location you are interested in &ndash; look up sightings for FH,RL, PrF, and GE &ndash; which will give you where you could see numbers of individuals of interesting wintering raptor species.
The dirt roads North and South of I-70 from Limon eastward is a good area, so also the area of Loveland and Fort Collins.

You can get general and specific information about the WRS programat https://www.hmana.org/winter-raptor-survey/

If you do start a survey, you will find that you will learn a lot about wintering raptors especially their ID, as we have improved our ID skills since 2022. We had to learn all about Ferruginous Hawk, Prairie Falcon, and all dark morph raptors which are not found in the east.

Ajit I Antony
Central Park, Denver, CO

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[cobirds] Northern Pygmy-Owl predation on Eurasian Collared-Dove

Deb had worked to rake the collection of leaves and sticks from the main
pathway through the 800 ft. wildlife shelter-belt on our farm in order
to walk more quietly.  This afternoon, she stepped through and flushed a
Pygmy-Owl from the ground to a nearby olive tree.  In it's talons are
the remains of a Eurasian Collared-Dove, already substantially
consumed.  The dove would have outweighed the owl by 2-4 times.  It
seems we have a well fed Pygmy-Owl in the yard.

In past years, I haven't found Pygmy-Owls to remain into a second day at
our farm on Central Orchard Mesa.  Tomorrow is another day and there's
more of the dove remaining.  We'll see, and hope. There are plenty more
collared doves to feast on.

Steve, and Deb Bouricius
Palisade, CO


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Re: [cobirds] Next BIRD BOMBS: Ups and Downs in Colorado, Feb 26 at 7 pm

Sorry, I can't make it.



On Tuesday, February 10, 2026, 4:14 PM, David Suddjian <dsuddjian@gmail.com> wrote:

Hi CoBirders,

You can register now for DFO's next BIRD BOMBS: Ups and Downs in Colorado, set to explode on Thursday, February 26 at 7pm. This free Zoom webinar will highlight Colorado's bird population trends from the North American Breeding Bird Survey (BBS). Learn what the BBS is all about, and how you can get involved. 

Check out any of the prior 41 BIRD BOMBS episodes in DFO's BIRD BOMBS library and on the DFO YouTube Channel.

David Suddjian
Littleton CO

Ups and Downs in Colorado (2).png

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