Sunday, 7 April 2024

Re: [cobirds] Yard list questions: How many of CO's 520 species have been seen (or heard) from a yard?

We kept a 'kitchen' list for 11 years at our previous residence.  It was a pretty good location for birding, backing up directly to the Twin Lakes Boulder County open space, with an active ditch in between, keeping everything well watered. 


Our rules for the kitchen list were simple: one just had to be able to see the bird from the kitchen, from which we could see our small yard and most of the western portion of open space.  


So I'm not sure if all of our list would count as yardbirds in the general sense here.  For example, very early one wet spring morning, Leslie noted a wedge of Ibis circling over the dog park.  From the kitchen, we watched them land in the dog park, and decided to walk out to take a closer look, just-in-case.  And, as luck would have it, one of them did turn out to be a Glossy ; https://ebird.org/checklist/S89750316 .  Is it a yardbird if you have to leave the yard to make the ID?


Style of yard listing: obsessed


How many species : 104 , highlights:


Common Redpoll - we had spent nearly 10 years looking carefully at all of the feeder birds, hoping for, but never seeing one.  Hopes were raised one morning when we saw a very large group of Siskins mobbing the feeder.  'Today is the day' I thought, and after watching our feeder for at least an hour, a rare bird alert came in for a Redpoll, with the location described as … right where our feeder is!  I ran outside and found the birder and bird just off to the east of our yard, but as the day progressed we finally had two Redpolls come into our yard multiple times.  


Long-eared Owl - one showed up two years in a row third weekend of October.  Once with a Harris' Sparrow hanging out nearby.


Eastern Screech Owl - spent a day right outside the window.


Ring-necked Duck - surprising diver hanging out with the typical Mallards in the ditch.  


Mexican Duck - was in the same ditch, ebird approved : https://ebird.org/checklist/S110301490


American Redstart - seen bathing in the ditch, probably the best of many super-cool yard passerines.


Bohemian Waxwing - 2013 and 2023 observations. 



Location/habitat: suburban-rural interface 



Was a really nice location; we have also seen racoons, skunks, white-tailed deer, foxes, bobcats and even a bear once.  As an added benefit, we learned the name of every misbehaving dog in Boulder county as their owners shouted their names at them (honorable mention for the guy loudly and repeatedly calling 'Wilson' one night).  




Dan Zmolek


Longmont - formerly Gunbarrel

Boulder County

On Monday, March 18, 2024 at 4:09:17 PM UTC-6 ridgw...@gmail.com wrote:

I just added Canada Jay to Bryan's Google Doc.  I've had them in my yard in Ridgway a couple of times so add one more to our count.  I know George Steele in Norwood found the Ruddy Ground Dove in his yard, but he might not be in this group.

Don Marsh

Ridgway

 

From: cob...@googlegroups.com <cob...@googlegroups.com> On Behalf Of Diana Beatty
Sent: Monday, March 18, 2024 9:49 AM
To: Bryan Guarente <bryan.g...@gmail.com>
Cc: Colorado Birds <cob...@googlegroups.com>
Subject: Re: [cobirds] Yard list questions: How many of CO's 520 species have been seen (or heard) from a yard?

 

The two not filled yet that I am a little surprised by are Canada Jay and Cassin's Sparrow - I figure someone with a home in the right habitat will have had these as yard birds....

 

Diana Beatty

El Paso County

 

On Wed, Mar 13, 2024 at 8:46 AM Bryan Guarente <bryan.g...@gmail.com> wrote:

If anyone wants to put their species into a shared Google Sheet using the CFO list of accepted species, feel free to go check off the ones you have seen in your yard here:

https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1OTEqQswiC_DjCkPZblkX36GS1cA0GdPVND8osM1Gkuo/edit?usp=sharing (Honor system please... only check birds that you have seen in your yard and don't uncheck other folks checks).

 

To join in on the conversation for my own yard:

 

How long have you been keeping your list?

Been keeping a yard list since 2000, but I have moved multiple times and thus have to change my yard list to another location.  Current run is 15 years.

 

What's your style of yard listing: casual, mainly feeder watching, moderate, dedicated, obsessed?

Dedicated to obsessed

 

How many species?

121

 

Rarest species?

Upland Sandpiper calling flying over my house at 11pm

Anhinga circling for multiple minutes with good binocular views

White-faced Ibises flying over at 10pm

Purple Finch (shared with many observers)

Chestnut-sided Warbler took up residence for a bit of a summer

Mountain Chickadees are nice this far away from the Foothills

Clay-colored and Brewer's Sparrows during Spring snowstorms

 

Favorite species?

Swainson's Hawks that nest nearby and hunt snakes in our backyard

Great Horned Owls hunting for those same snakes

 

Most memorable experience?

Definitely the Upland Sandpiper... totally unexpected and wasn't particularly "birding" at 11pm

 

Location/habitat: urban, suburban, rural, etc?

Suburban Longmont in the flyway between McIntosh Lake and Union Reservoir

 

Hope others continue this thread.  It is fascinating!  Thanks Thomas for starting it.

 

Thanks,

Bryan


Bryan Guarente

Meteorologist/Instructional Designer

UCAR/The COMET Program

Boulder, CO

 

 

On Wed, Mar 13, 2024 at 7:37 AM Susanna Donato <susanna...@gmail.com> wrote:

What a fun thread! I am in the heart of urban Denver and have had feeders up/been birding for only a couple of years. My yard total is just 39 species. We have a National Wildlife Federation-certified yard (just for fun) with some fruiting trees and lots of brush and piles of junk, but also very diligent squirrels and two terrier-type dogs to frustrate matters. I watch daily but distractedly. 

 

Most notable for me have been a close encounter with a Black-Chinned Hummingbird that hovered within a few feet for a minute or two as I ate my breakfast/birded one morning, a Sharp-Shinned Hawk in my cherry tree and on the fence just outside my window and diving into the cotoneaster frequented by a flock of house sparrows (verified by Dick Anderson, a far more veteran birder), and the white-crowned sparrows that lived in our yard or nearby last winter. 

 

Favorites include the Spotted Towhees that have lived in our yard the last two years and raised two young that I watched grow up at close range, ten feet outside my office window. Last summer we had Swainson's Hawks growing up in the neighborhood, which was neat to see. A Bald Eagle supposedly nests somewhere on the street behind mine, and a couple of months ago, I heard it but did not see it -- I gave up obsessively looking for it for my own sanity but still hold out hope. :) 

On Tuesday, March 12, 2024 at 4:51:44 PM UTC-6 Sarah Behunek wrote:

Yes, very fun discussion and thanks for sharing! 

Where and how long.

I have lived at 6030 feet west of Horsetooth Reservoir (south of Horsetooth Mt. Park) for 21 years. I started with one bird feeder about 10 years ago. 

That mushroomed to more feeders over the last few years. I started casually journal counting last year and now do a daily EBird count (Robins just showed up today!) 

As I am new to the count, I haven't broken down by species yet. My 40+ list includes many of the common and migratory birds found in Colorado and at my elevation with a reliable food source good water sources nearby.

Notable for me: Separately, Cooper's and Sharp Shinned Hawk in the tree outside my window.  I had a Bald Eagle chase a Raven (it had a snake in its beak) from my yard utility pole with Magpies flying along opportunistically. I had a Gullnado (most likely reservoir/landfill ring billed-gulls). And now, we have Wild Turkeys (sometimes 3, sometimes 16 routinely coming through our yard for feeder snacks this year and to ride on the "merry go round" that is my tray feeder. 

And sometimes we can year the SandHill Cranes flying over our area. 

Happy Birding. 

 

 

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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