Wednesday, 9 September 2020

[cobirds] Re: Ruff-TimnathReservoir-Larimer County

Well said!
Nick Komar and I searched extensively for the bird yesterday late afternoon into the evening without luck. I would strongly urge other birders who are able, to pursue refinding this bird, however! (There are two Sanderlings, lots of Stilt Sandpipers, a Pectoral Sandpiper, and four Black Terns as well out there.) Thank you for your great finds and contributions to the Colorado birding community, Josh!

The birds are happy, and so am I,
~Caleb Alons, Larimer County

On Tuesday, September 8, 2020 at 10:34:28 PM UTC-6 Josh Bruening wrote:
All,

First, let me report a Red Knot at Fossil Creek Reservoir that I found at noon today.  Luckily this bird was seen by many people.  Better photos were taken than the ones I included on my Ebird checklist.  

Second, there is some question to the veracity of my report of a Ruff earlier this morning at Timnath Reservoir.  I would like to put out there first that I am more than willing to go to school on my identification of a Ruff vs. Buff-Breasted Sandpiper.  Therefore, I would love to defer to the experts.  However, several things were brought up that questioned the sighting.  Mainly, the tertial feathers.  Also, the bill was called into question.  Before I mount my defense, I would like to acknowledge that I have exactly one experience each with both of these specie.  

The reason that I called this a Ruff was the crazy dark head feathers and thick bill.  Also, the bill was thick at the base and bi-colored from what I could see.  The bill was also longer than what I would expect from a Buff-breasted.  Buff-breasted bills are short and dainty.  Beyond the the bill and the head feathers was the fact that it was larger than the Killdeer and Lesser Yellowlegs nearby.  I'm not sure how just the tertials is a good enough indicator to species at that point.  A Buff-breasted should be far smaller.  Again, in a time of molt, I'm not clear as to why the tertials are the determining factor here.  I don't usually "defend" a sighting but am at odds with this one.  Further, if this was "just" a bird that got beat up or stained by the storm.  I don't get it.  This bird looked like a Muppet.  If that storm was equivalent to a 15 round bout with Mike Tyson, I get it.  But it didn't look like it to me.

I truly hope this bird stuck around and can be refound.  Truthfully, I don't care what it is.  I think it's a Ruff.  Either way, it's a great bird for Larimer County in the fall.

Bird is the word!

Josh Bruening
Fort Collins

--
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Colorado Birds" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to cobirds+unsubscribe@googlegroups.com.
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/cobirds/e0c88d1e-c306-4b93-b23e-4b748b21676an%40googlegroups.com.

No comments:

Post a Comment