Your home run today damaged several seats, in consecutive rows.Congrats!
Tom Wilberding
On Wednesday, May 1, 2013 3:29:00 PM UTC-6, Ted Floyd wrote:
--Hello, Birders.Boulder Reservoir, Boulder County, was predictably very, very birdy this snowy morning, May 1st.The very first bird I laid eyes on, upon turning into the west entrance, was a Sage Thrasher running across the road. Then I saw a bunch of American Robins fly by, and then a Western Willet, and then an Eastern Bluebird...and, well, things were fast-paced like that for the whole rest of the morning.There was a great presence of McCown's Longspurs along the main loop road; at least 13, all apparently alternate males, and most or all of them quite vocal, were right along the road near the model airplane field.Sparrows were everywhere along the road edges. I came up with: 1 Spotted Towhee, 33 Chipping Sparrows, 1 Brewer's Sparrow, 60 Vesper Sparrows, 3 Lark Sparrows, 11 Savannah Sparrows, 1 Grasshopper Sparrow, 1 Song Sparrow, 4 Mountain White-crowned Sparrows, 2 Gambel's White-crowned Sparrows, 1 Slate-colored Junco, 2 Oregon Juncos, 1 Pink-sided Junco, and 1 Gray-headed Junco.So were American Pipits, about 75 of them, everywhere. And a few Mountain Bluebirds (12). Oh, and American Robins in tremendous abundance (at least 325), and a Townsend's Solitaire.Shorebirds. The main action was on the north shore, where I saw 15 Marbled Godwits, 2 Long-billed Curlews, 28 Western Willets, 4 beautiful and vocal alternate Long-billed Dowitchers, and Peter Burke. Other shorebirds scattered around the lake shore were Killdeer, Greater and Lesser yellowlegs, a peep, a Wilson's Snipe, and Wilson's Phalaropes. At one point I was looking straight on at something that resembled, but wasn't, a thick-banded plover (Wilson's? Common Ringed?), but it was just another ho-hum McCown's Longspur.Ibi. A big flock on the north shore had one straightforward Glossy Ibis; when I left, it and Peter B. were off to the right of the main flock just a little ways.Franklin's Gulls and swallows. They were legion.Warblers. A few Audubon's along the lake shore, and 2 Orange-crowns along roadsides.The one that got away. I very briefly saw, at quite close range, a nice dull-pumpkin-orange sparrow-like job with faint black marks on the head and a few thin white bars on the brownish wings. But then I was very literally in danger of being steamrolled (there was a work crew out there), and had to get out of the way, and that, as they say, was that. Was it a female Smith's Longspur? Dunno, as I saw it through the windshield for just a few seconds.Could someone go look for it, please? Pretty please? Last seen in the general vicinity of the McCown's, at the model airplane field.Ted FloydLafayette, Boulder County, Colorado
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