Sunday, 3 February 2013

Re: [cobirds] Gullapalooza recap

Classic splitter/lumper debate.

Chuck Hundertmark

On Sun, Feb 3, 2013 at 2:41 PM, <stevenelarson@comcast.net> wrote:

Hi All,

I beg to differ, Norm. I think there are really two species. White-headed Gulls and Black-headed Gulls.

Steve Larson

Northglenn, CO


From: "Norm Lewis" <migrant44@aol.com>
To: tedfloyd57@hotmail.com, cobirds@googlegroups.com
Sent: Sunday, February 3, 2013 12:20:45 PM
Subject: Re: [cobirds] Gullapalooza recap



A huge thanks to Ted and Dave for arranging this tremendous annual event.  If it gets any bigger, Ted is going to have to arrange for crowd control!  As evidence of the general conviviality of birders, only a few minor fistfights broke out ( :-) ).....anyway, this was a truly enjoyable event, and as Ted mentioned, it was great to see a lot of kids in the group.  My favorite part was, as always, eavesdropping on discussions of bird identification, especially concerning gulls, of which I still maintain there is actually only one species....

Norm
Lakewood

Norm Lewis
migrant44@aol.com



-----Original Message-----
From: Ted Floyd <tedfloyd57@hotmail.com>
To: cobirds <cobirds@googlegroups.com>
Sent: Sat, Feb 2, 2013 9:15 pm
Subject: [cobirds] Gullapalooza recap


Hello, Birders.




Well over 300 (!) birders participated this afternoon, Saturday, February 2, in Gullapalooza-2013, held at the Xcel Energy Valmont generating station, Boulder County. We had 315 folks pass through the turnstile at the start of the outing, and Dave Madonna tells me that late arrivals were still trickling in for some time thereafter.




Wow.




The weather was glorious. We had a few gusts of wind, but, otherwise, it was nearly calm, with warm sunshine, all afternoon.




Highlights:




Raptors. Ferruginous Hawk, Harlan's Hawk, Golden Eagle, numerous Bald Eagles, Merlin, and Prairie Falcon.




Songbirds. Few and far between, but several of the groups saw a flock of Common Redpolls. (Say, I just noticed that Common Redpoll isn't on the Boulder County list on the Colorado County Birding website.)




Anseriformes. Numbers low overall (danged weather too nice!), and we missed some common species. But it was nice to see 12 Tundra Swans still hanging on. Also a lone Snow Goose, and several over-the-top-stunning drake Wood Ducks. And the usual blazingly beautiful drake Hooded, Red-breasted, and Common mergansers.




Gulls. Still piecing together the pieces on this one, but some nifty ones were seen.


--A decided crowd-pleaser was an adult or nearly adult Lesser Black-backed Gull. We saw a for-sure first-cycle of this species, too, and a few not-so-sure first-cycles.


--Somewhat ambiguous was a quite-pale "Thiceland" Gull. Several knowledgeable folks were leaning strongly Iceland on it, and I respect that, but I, personally, wasn't sure. This bird, whatever it was, was beautiful.


--Thayer's Gull. A glorious adult, a sub-glorious adult, and a typical first-cycle or two.


--Glaucous-winged Gull. The description I heard, from multiple observers, was perfect. Wow. As to whether it was "really" a Glaucous-winged Gull is an insoluble and perhaps properly imponderable ontological dilemma.




Random other stuff: quite a number of Western Grebes, a couple of Horned Grebes, a Black-crowned Night-Heron, and an awful lot of coots.




But the real highlight, truly, was all the people. It was great to see at least 6 parties of at least 10 children under the age of 10, and I suspect I missed a few. All the "serious" birders behaved themselves, and graciously and effectively helped the newer birders see all the great birds. The 4-letter word "tertials" was used only once in my hearing.




A huge thanks to our wonderful leaders: Bill Schmoker, Bill Kaempfer, Christian Nunes, Nathan Pieplow, Joel Such, Marcel Such, Nick Komar, Kathy Mihm-Dunning, Jeff Gordon, Jennie Duberstein, and Amar Ayyash. Thanks also to Liz Gordon (American Birding Association) and Maggie Boswell (Colorado Field Ornithologists) for logistical support.




And thanks most of all to Dave Madonna, XCel Energy engineer, for his wonderful hospitality.




Gullapalooza-2013 was sponsored by the American Birding Association, the Boulder Birder Club, Colorado Field Ornithologists, Denver Field Ornithologists, and Xcel Energy.




Ted Floyd


tedfloyd57@hotmail.com


Lafayette, Boulder County, Colorado
                                               

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--
Chuck Hundertmark
2546 Lake Meadow Drive
Lafayette, CO 80026
303-604-0531
Cell: 720-771-8659

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