Sunday 17 March 2024

[cobirds] Add Brambling to your list!

Great thread! I'm new to the list and am the fortunate one to have spotted and reported the Brambling in my backyard in Colorado Springs.  I am becoming more and more of a serious birder, but not to the extent of this impressive group!

How long:            10-15 years
Style:                   casual to dedicated 
How Many:          64 (but many more that I haven't identified)
Location:             suburban, but large natural yard.
Rarest/favorites:  Brambling, Northern Cardinal, love the Evening Grosbeaks and Bushtits

Dave Resch
Colorado Springs, El Paso County


On Sun, Mar 17, 2024, 7:26 AM Gregg Goodrich <gregggoodrich@gmail.com> wrote:
Thomas

Great thread! Thanks for starting it. So fun to read about the birds seen from everyone's yards. No new species for the list, but here are my highlights.

How long:  8 years

Style:  At least one eBird list everyday we are home.

Number:  100 species

Rarest:  Lewis's Woodpecker, Spotted Sandpiper in creek, Cassin's Kingbird, Rose-breasted Grosbeak

Memorable:  Bohemian Waxwings. After seeing them in several locations around the metro area the first of last year, they finally made it to our yard. I had six sightings from the yard between January 27, 2023 and February 7, 2023. The largest count was around 250. On a walk at the end of the block I had a yard with over 800.

Like Duane, I have had fun birds while shoveling the snow. Sandhill Cranes, Snow Geese and Peregrine Falcon flyovers.
 
Location: Our Highlands Ranch home's back deck faces a riparian open space with a small creek.  5820'

Gregg Goodrich
Highlands Ranch in Douglas County

On Saturday, March 16, 2024 at 10:17:47 AM UTC-6 Diana Beatty wrote:
For people who are in to yard listing and/or citizen science, you might be interested in a new gadget.

I recently bought a haikubox.  This is a box you plug in to an external outlet at your home and it constantly listens for birds and uses your wifi. You use an app or website to see what it hears.  It records short intervals and you can listen and verify accuracy .  It keeps ongoing data you can download or track online.  It shares the data with Cornell Labs and the haikubox network.    

Diana Beatty
El Paso County

On Sat, Mar 16, 2024, 9:23 AM 'Norm Lewis' via Colorado Birds <cob...@googlegroups.com> wrote:
PPS- I should have read the directions a little morel closely- I would say I fall into the obsessed category- I keep 10-15 feeders active, depending upon the season, and have a semi-wild area on my back hill, as I live in a little valley and the upper back yard areas on the street are not developed, which gives me about an eighth of an acre of mixed trees and brush.

Whew.  I think that's all!

Norm

On Saturday, March 16, 2024 at 08:33:54 AM MDT, Thomas Heinrich <tehei...@gmail.com> wrote:


Hi all,
Another quick update on the lists. In addition to the 350 species on Google list that Bryan has set up, I have another 26 species from birders who have sent lists directly to me.

So the current total # of species:  376 

Getting close to 400!

I hope to have the list I'm compiling wrapped up this weekend and off to Bryan to merge with his Google sheet. The list will include names and counties. Please let me know if you would prefer to remain anonymous. Also, if there is a particular species (or couple of species) that you ticked off on Bryan's list that you would like to have your name next to on the new list, please let me know. I'll be attempting to include all who have contributed to the list in an equitable way. 

Thanks again to all who have shared and contributed,

Thomas 

On Mon, Mar 11, 2024 at 10:40 AM Thomas Heinrich <tehei...@gmail.com> wrote:
Hi all,

Every now and then one of us will share the excitement of adding a rarity or new species to a yard list, report yard list totals, or comment on local trends. And some of the lists, and variety of species, are really impressive (e.g. David Suddjian's, Gary Lefko's). 

Yellow Grosbeak, Pyrrhuloxia, Streak-backed Oriole, Long-billed Thrasher, Costa's Hummingbird, Laurence's Goldfinch, and even Anhinga come to mind as rarities that have shown up in or been observed from yards. (Perhaps the recent Brambling, too?)

As a pretty obsessive yard lister (i.e. binocs always on, camera ready when outdoors, much of the time indoors too), I often wonder about others' experience with yard-listing. 

How long have you been keeping your list?
What's your style of yard listing: casual, mainly feeder watching, moderate, dedicated, obsessed?
How many species?
Rarest, or favorite species?
Most memorable experience?
Location/habitat: urban, suburban, rural, etc?

And the big question: if we tallied up all our yard lists, how close to Colorado's 520 species could we get?

It seems likely that certain families would be less well-represented; shorebirds, waterfowl, and gulls, for example. But with neighborhoods lining bodies of water such as Boyd Lake, Lake Loveland, Marston Reservoir, Jackson Lake, and MacIntosh Lake (in Boulder), among many others, many of those species theoretically could have been counted on a yard list. Maybe some lucky person living on the shores of Boyd Lake has Long-tailed Jaeger, Slaty-backed Gull, and Garganey on their yard list!

Wishing all good health, good birding, and an exciting Spring migration!

--Thomas Heinrich


My answers to the questions above:
15 years
Dedicated to obsessive 
152 species
Wood Thrush, Yellow-throated Warbler, N Cardinal, Common Redpoll, Bohemian Waxwing
Watching spring raptor migration from the roof-top, 35 Broad-winged Hawks among 130 raptors of 10 species on one high-flow day (4/18/2020)
Interface between suburban and open space, base of foothills, el. 5600'


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