Sunday, 24 May 2015

[cobirds] Boulder County birding mudfest Part 3 - last

All:
              Oh lordy. Will it every end.  The rain, the hail, the mud.  

These are for May 22, 23, 23 for Boulder County.  

Species of note are listed in CAPS. 

Sawhills \ Walden - SWAINSON's THRUSH, western wood peewee, common yellowthroat, and more American white pelicans.  Some Audubon's warblers, but numbers are dwindling.  A wet sloppy day.

Skunk Creek Boulder Mt Park -
RED HEADED WOODPECKER - flew across the intersection of Skunk Creek and the NCAR feeder trail.  Good looks, flew up into a ponderosa.  What makes this so unusual, is that red-headed's have been in serious decline throughout Boulder County for decades.  And even more unusual - I've never seen one in Boulder Mt Park, in a mixed ponderosa forest. 

Also at skunk creek:  lazuli buntings, bullock's orioles, yellow breasted chats, spotted towhees, gray catbirds, lesser goldfinches, pine siskins, yellow warblers, MacGillvray's warblers, green tailed towhee, western tanagers, blue gray gnatcatcher, SWAINSON's THRUSH, cordilleran flycatcher, scrub jay, and virgina's warbler. And mule deer and one coyote pup. 

And mud - I sunk to my ankles in gooey sticky mud on upper skunk creek trail.

Sombrero Marsh:   Someone else already reported, but I saw 4 BLACK TERNS at the marsh.  Along with a GREAT TAILED GRACKLE. (Alex Cruz told me they were roosted there). 

Wild Basin RNMP:  Boulder County:  it started as a nice sunny day, and ended up with hail, thunderstorms, and torrential rain. - golden crowned kinglets, ruby crowned kinglets, brown creeper, American dipper, cooper's hawk, Audubon's warblers (lots, singing), dusky grouse.    I got stuck on a ridge above Ouzel Lake, with storms moving in from every direction.  Within 20 minutes it went from blue skies to searing flashes of lightning and dark-as-midnight clouds. Pounding hail all the way back to the parking lot.  (Note:  upper Wild Basin parking lot is now open.  Bridge at Ouzel Falls is still out, but you can cross if you have good balance and some hiking poles). 

Bear Creek Canyon:  from the Bear Creek Neighborhood:  the lower footbridge is out; so is the upper footbridge.  There are large sections of sucking, oozing, mud. 
OVENBIRD:  at the upper creek  crossing, (where the Mesa Trail intersects) and another one about 400 yards south on the Mesa Trail.  Both singing.
RED EYED VIREO - Just above the upper creek crossing, singing and foraging in douglas fir, aspen, and box elder.
Along with:  gray catbirds, yellow breasted chats, MacGillvray's warbler (7), Virginia's warbler (3), Yellow warbler (12), Audubon's warbler (1), cordilleran flycatcher, western wood peewee, SWAINSON's THRUSH, blue gray gnatcatcher, black headed grosbeak, warbler vireo, western tanager (7), bullock's oriole, spotted towhee, green tailed towhee (6), lesser goldfinch, pine siskin, and a golden eagle being pummeled by a  common raven. 

I heard it might clear up by Wednesday, but I doubt it.

Backyard in Louisville:  got some strange stuff coming in today:  black headed grosbeak, spotted towhee, and broad tailed hummingbird. 

The Heatherwood Trail was opened, closed, opened, and now closed again.   

I've pretty much had it with the rain.  I'm going somewhere tropical soon.   ;) 

John T (Tumasonis) of Louisville CO










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