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Sunday, 31 August 2025

[cobirds] Dinosaur Ridge - Denver Field Ornithologists (31 Aug 2025) 25 Raptors

Dinosaur Ridge - Denver Field Ornithologists
Golden, Colorado, USA

Daily Raptor Counts: Aug 31, 2025
SpeciesDay's CountMonth TotalSeason Total
Black Vulture000
Turkey Vulture244
Osprey000
Bald Eagle000
Northern Harrier000
Sharp-shinned Hawk555
Cooper's Hawk112
American Goshawk000
Red-shouldered Hawk000
Broad-winged Hawk000
Red-tailed Hawk41213
Rough-legged Hawk000
Swainson's Hawk84950
Ferruginous Hawk000
Golden Eagle122
American Kestrel456
Merlin000
Peregrine Falcon011
Prairie Falcon012
Mississippi Kite000
Unknown Accipitrine000
Unknown Buteo022
Unknown Falcon000
Unknown Eagle000
Unknown Raptor011
Short-eared Owl000
Total:258388


Observation start time: 08:00:00
Observation end time: 16:00:00
Total observation time: 8 hours
Official CounterAjit Antony
Observers: Liza Antony



Visitors:
Two little girls 6 and 7 year old came to the watch. The older one said to me "Thats cool" pointing at my scope. I offered them my binoculars and they looked at the tall antenna on Green Mountain and were thrilled with the view, stretching their hand out as if to touch it. 2 bicyclists stopped at the watch and asked Liza about migration, she explained about raptors migrating during the day and songbirds migrating at night. A hiker walked toward me flapping his hands widely, I nodded, he said Aha. A trail runner stopped at the watch, and offered that he was from New York. He turned out to live in Nyack which is the town just below the Hook Mountain Hawk Watch where we used to count as volunteers between 2019 and 2022 in fall, as well as starting a regular spring watch there which continues. He wanted to know the range of RT, and I showed him on the Merlin app. He wanted to know whether they were migrating north or south in fall, and asked him what he thought, and he guessed correctly. I told him to think about what happens when there's heavy snow up North, where would raptors feed if they didn't migrate?

Weather:
Perfectly blue sky with a few puffy thermal-topping clouds to the West, which gradually increased by the second hour to a broken line of clouds from north to SW, where we find most of our migrants. There were light winds from the East, with 16 mph winds predicted after noon which did not alas materialize as the temperatures between 21 and 31 degrees Celsius (92+ degrees Fahrenheit), humidity 37-41 and decreasing, steady barometric pressure, cloud cover 0% initially ending at 25%, excellent visibility to 24 kilometers. Earth.nullschool.net showed winds aloft at 700 hPa, i.e. up to 1 mile above ground level at 18 kilometers per hour streaming from the NNW. The soaring forecast was excellent at 4.9 meters per second, think of that, that is 16 feet rise every second within thermals, and thermals rising to 11,037 feet above ground level, i.e. upto two miles high!

Raptor Observations:
Today was a red-letter day for this exploratory fall count 2025 in that we have counted 50 migrating Swainson's Hawk, which is 4 more than seen during the entire spring hawk watch 2025 here at the Dinosaur Ridge Hawk Watch! See https://groups.google.com/g/cobirds/c/Oznn4uc6MBk The first Raptor aloft was a TV at 9:08 AM MDT, followed by the first migrant raptor an SS at 9:19 AM. Adult GE migrated at 12:47 PM. All migrants flew far to the NW and high over the western ridge. In the last hour we saw two male AK tangling to the SW, following which one flew back and down to the NW of the watch, while the other migrated and was joined by another male AK which tangled with it briefly, and both flew South. 1 SW was molting its innermost right secondary feather. Non migrant raptors: GE 4 - at 1:19 PM, 2 at 2:39 PM and 1 at 4:21 PM which was missing a left innermost secondary and 2 others, all of them circled high and eventually flew north. SW 1 flew south, then NW In the last hour. Osprey 1. RT 3, one of which was attacked by a small unidentified raptor. AK 2 - male and female in the last hour, the former sitting on one of the wires to the North.

Non-raptor Observations:
White-throated Swift 2, Violet-green Swallow 6, Common Raven 7, Black-capped Chickadee 1, Woodhouse's Scrub-Jay 2, Broad-tailed Hummingbird female which hovered 3 feet in front of Liza. 3 paragliders took off around 10:15 AM And soared very high consonant with the excellent soaring forecast, they went far South and returned at 3:15 PM.

Predictions:
Very similar to today but a few degrees hotter.


Report submitted by Official Counter of the day shown above (dinoridgehw@gmail.com)
Dinosaur Ridge - Denver Field Ornithologists information may be found at: www.dinosaurridgehawkwatch.org
More information at hawkcount.org: [Site Profile] [Day Summary] [Month Summary]




Site Description
Dinosaur Ridge is the only regularly staffed hawk watch in Colorado and is the
best place in the world to see migrating Ferruginous Hawks. Hawk watchers may
see 17 species of migrating raptors; and it is an excellent site to see rare
dark morph buteos including Broad-winged hawk, Swainson’s hawk, Ferruginous
hawk, Rough-legged hawk and Red-tailed Hawk. Other raptors we see include Golden
and Bald Eagles, Northern harrier, Osprey, Peregrine Falcons, Prairie Falcons,
Cooper's and Sharp-shinned Hawks, American Kestrels, Merlin, and Turkey
Vultures. American Goshawk is uncommon but also counted each season. Non-raptor
species include Rock Wren, Bushtit, Western Bluebird, Sandhill Crane,
White-throated Swift, American White Pelican, and Dusky Grouse. Birders of any
skill level are always welcome. The hawk watch at Dinosaur Ridge is staffed by
Hawk Counter(s) and volunteers from March through early May.

Directions to site:
From exit 259 on I-70 towards Morrison, drive south under freeway and take left
into first parking lot, the Stegosaurus lot. Follow hawk watch signs from the
southwest end of the parking lot to the hawk watch site. The hike starts heading
east on an old two-track and quickly turns south onto a trail on the west side
of the ridge. When the trail nears the top of the ridge, turn left, and walk to
the flat area at the crest of the ridge. (Distance: 0.56 miles, Elevation gain:
259 feet)

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[cobirds] Bird Conservancy of the Rockies - Barr Banding Report 8/31/25

Wilson's Warblers arrived today.  20 of them, more than doubling the total of WIWAs we caught in the previous 8 days.  90% were hatch year birds, which is about what we should be seeing at this time in the migration.  It is hard to express the relief we felt in having a "normal" amount of our most caught species arrive.

The only obvious (to us) environmental change I would note is this morning was the first day in a week that the sky has been clear (no clouds, no fog) at dawn.

To go with the 20 Wilson's Warblers, we had:

Willow Flycatcher 1
MacGillivray's Warbler 1 (FOS)
Chipping Sparrow 1 (FOS)

for a total of 23 birds for the morning.

We are closed tomorrow; back in business on Tuesday.  Come visit!  Our visitor hours: Weekends we will run 3 sessions, at 8, 9, and 10 a.m.  Weekdays (Tues through Fri) there will be a 7:30 to 8:30 session.   These are small group sessions (15 or fewer visitors), and a great way to learn more about the species that move through the front range in the fall.  There is a $7 fee and registration is required - click here to register.

Meredith McBurney
Bander - Barr Lake Banding Station
Bird Conservancy of the Rockies

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Saturday, 30 August 2025

[cobirds] Dinosaur Ridge - Denver Field Ornithologists (30 Aug 2025) 11 Raptors

Dinosaur Ridge - Denver Field Ornithologists
Golden, Colorado, USA

Daily Raptor Counts: Aug 30, 2025
SpeciesDay's CountMonth TotalSeason Total
Black Vulture000
Turkey Vulture122
Osprey000
Bald Eagle000
Northern Harrier000
Sharp-shinned Hawk000
Cooper's Hawk001
American Goshawk000
Red-shouldered Hawk000
Broad-winged Hawk000
Red-tailed Hawk389
Rough-legged Hawk000
Swainson's Hawk54142
Ferruginous Hawk000
Golden Eagle011
American Kestrel012
Merlin000
Peregrine Falcon011
Prairie Falcon112
Mississippi Kite000
Unknown Accipitrine000
Unknown Buteo122
Unknown Falcon000
Unknown Eagle000
Unknown Raptor011
Short-eared Owl000
Total:115863


Observation start time: 07:45:00
Observation end time: 12:30:00
Total observation time: 4.75 hours
Official CounterAjit Antony
Observers: Karolyn Chan, Liza Antony



Visitors:
Karolyn Chan helped us for two hours. A woman overheard us talking to Karolyn about migration and she wanted to know whether the raptors were migrating along I-70. I explained hat they were flying south for the winter, and told her that SW fly as far south as Argentina. She wanted to know how far North they come from, and I showed her the range map on the Merlin app. I also showed her two distant TV through my scope, not visible to the naked eye, which she appreciated.

Weather:
The prediction today was for light winds from the NE with cloud cover beginning at 55%, however at the watch there was 95% cloud cover which gradually dropped to 60%. Humidity was 46 to 66%. Temperature between 23 and 17 degrees Celsius, visibility was initially reduced to 15 km but later rose to 24 km. Earth.nullschool.net predicted 18 km/hr winds aloft at the level raptors would fly, coming down from the NW. 10 minutes before the end of the second hour in 15 minutes after the hour there was a drizzle which cleared up. Between 11:47 AM and 12:10 PM my My Lightning app showed 5 lighting strikes at Idaho Springs 19 miles to the West. At 1:30 PM there was repeated thunder heard with rain coming down to the West, so we decided to end the watch.

Raptor Observations:
Exploratory fall count 2025. See https://groups.google.com/g/cobirds/c/Oznn4uc6MBk The first migrant at 9:36 AM MDT was a Prairie Falcon that flew a slightly below eye level in the valley to the West, going South. It had a uniformly sandy upperwing and tail, and I was surprised to be able to see the dark armpits as it was flying at eye level away from me! Then there was a lull for an hour and a half, and we were wondering whether the raptors were drenched by the rain last night and would take a while for them to dry out in order to be able to fly, but an SW did show up then over the western ridge, where we found all of the raptors, the last 4 being high, over 2 binocular fields over the ridge. There was a small kettle of 3 SW at 1:04 p.m., and the SW before that had a molting primary indicating an adult. Non migrating Raptors RT 5, TV 9.

Non-raptor Observations:
Violet-green Swallow 6, House Finch 1, Woodhouse's Scrub-Jay 4, Common Raven 1, Downy Woodpecker 1. Karolyn had her Merlin Bird ID on, and it identified Red Crossbill flying overhead!

Predictions:
Sunny, with a high near 77 degrees Fahrenheit, light winds from the NNW at 9:00 AM, changing to NNE the next hour, thereafter NE, with minimal cloud cover, and for the first time in weeks, no prediction of afternoon thunderstorms. Perhaps this is the beginning of the end of the DCVZ, the cause of daily afternoon thunderstorms in Denver. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Denver_Convergence_Vorticity_Zone


Report submitted by Official Counter of the day shown above (dinoridgehw@gmail.com)
Dinosaur Ridge - Denver Field Ornithologists information may be found at: www.dinosaurridgehawkwatch.org
More information at hawkcount.org: [Site Profile] [Day Summary] [Month Summary]




Site Description
Dinosaur Ridge is the only regularly staffed hawk watch in Colorado and is the
best place in the world to see migrating Ferruginous Hawks. Hawk watchers may
see 17 species of migrating raptors; and it is an excellent site to see rare
dark morph buteos including Broad-winged hawk, Swainson’s hawk, Ferruginous
hawk, Rough-legged hawk and Red-tailed Hawk. Other raptors we see include Golden
and Bald Eagles, Northern harrier, Osprey, Peregrine Falcons, Prairie Falcons,
Cooper's and Sharp-shinned Hawks, American Kestrels, Merlin, and Turkey
Vultures. American Goshawk is uncommon but also counted each season. Non-raptor
species include Rock Wren, Bushtit, Western Bluebird, Sandhill Crane,
White-throated Swift, American White Pelican, and Dusky Grouse. Birders of any
skill level are always welcome. The hawk watch at Dinosaur Ridge is staffed by
Hawk Counter(s) and volunteers from March through early May.

Directions to site:
From exit 259 on I-70 towards Morrison, drive south under freeway and take left
into first parking lot, the Stegosaurus lot. Follow hawk watch signs from the
southwest end of the parking lot to the hawk watch site. The hike starts heading
east on an old two-track and quickly turns south onto a trail on the west side
of the ridge. When the trail nears the top of the ridge, turn left, and walk to
the flat area at the crest of the ridge. (Distance: 0.56 miles, Elevation gain:
259 feet)

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[cobirds] Bird Conservancy of the Rockies - Barr Banding Report 8/30/25

Up a bit today (got to double digits!), but waayyy below normal, including below last year at this temporary location.  Thanks to our many interested and interesting Saturday visitors, who helped make the day fun.

Here are today's new birds:

Dusky Flycatcher 1
Northern House Wren 1
Orange-crowned Warbler 1
Yellow Warbler 2
Common Yellowthroat 1
Wilson's Warbler 7

Our visitor hours: Weekends we will run 3 sessions, at 8, 9, and 10 a.m.  Weekdays (Tues through Fri) there will be a 7:30 to 8:30 session.   These are small group sessions (15 or fewer visitors), and a great way to learn more about the species that move through the front range in the fall.  There is a $7 fee and registration is required - click here to register.

Meredith McBurney
Bander - Barr Lake Banding Station
Bird Conservancy of the Rockies 

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[cobirds] Chico Basin Ranch- Bird Conservancy of the Rockies

Today was the ribbon cutting ceremony for the new educational building at Chico. The Architectural students from University of Colorado Denver developed and built the building for use by the banding team and serving educational groups. The students came back from graduating for the ceremony. They did a terrific job from the ground up! The birds were there to thank them. Fifty-nine new birds were banded including 18 species.  

First of the season were Yellow Warbler, American Redstart, Western Flycatcher, Willow Flycatcher, Orchard Oriole, White-breasted Nuthatch, Gray Catbird, and Blue Grosbeak. These past two days equaled the first 2.5 weeks of the bird numbers for spring. It is nice to see the birds are around. Hoping Barr Lake gets the right winds to bring birds to their station.

59 New Banded Birds
Wilson's Warbler- 10
American Redstart- 1
Yellow Warbler- 1
Western Wood-pewee- 7
Western Flycatcher- 4
Willow Flycatcher- 1
Olive-sided Flycatcher- 1
Northern House Wren- 3
Lesser Goldfinch- 2
American Goldfinch- (which has a different Alpha code AGOL- because of American Goshawk)- 6
Orchard Oriole- 2
Western Tanager- 8
White-breasted Nuthatch- 1
Blue Grosbeak- 2
Gray Catbird- 2
Common Grackle- woohoo- 4
Brown Thrasher- 1
American Robin- 3

1 Recapture- Wilson's Warbler

The banding station will be closed tomorrow and reopen at sunrise on Monday. Birding is  available on the ranch tomorrow morning by signing up on the Aiken Audubon website www.aikenaudubon.com. Stop by the banding station and share you sightings next week.

Have a good weekend,
Julie Shieldcastle
Chico Basin Ranch Bird Bander
Bird Conservancy of the Rockies

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Friday, 29 August 2025

[cobirds] Flying ants & nighthawks - Arapahoe

Just now -- while slowly wandering my yard in Centennial, CO -- I stumbled upon several anthills with winged ants emerging. I assumed they'd bring Common Nighthawks and, as a rain started, came two.

- Jared Del Rosso
Centennial, CO

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[cobirds] Bird Conservancy of the Rockies - Barr Banding Report 8/29/25

It seemed early on that we might actually have a somewhat normal early fall day - We quickly caught 3 Common Yellowthroats and 3 Wilson's Warblers while we replaced 2 nets and repaired a 3rd that were damaged by our resident herd of deer, harangued the raccoon until he lumbered off away from the nets, and enjoyed our visitors - a DFO group led by Charlie Chase.  But that was about it for the morning, and we ended with just 9 new birds (plus 3 others banded earlier this season, not listed below):

Dusky Flycatcher 1
Yellow Warbler 1
Common Yellowthroat 3
Wilson's Warbler 3
Lincoln's Sparrow 1

Happy that Julie had such a good opening day at Chico - there are birds out there!

Our visitor hours: Weekends we will run 3 sessions, at 8, 9, and 10 a.m.  Weekdays (Tues through Fri) there will be a 7:30 to 8:30 session.   These are small group sessions (15 or fewer visitors), and a great way to learn more about the species that move through the front range in the fall.  There is a $7 fee and registration is required - click here to register.

Meredith McBurney
Bander - Barr Lake Banding Station
Bird Conservancy of the Rockies

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[cobirds] Dinosaur Ridge - Denver Field Ornithologists (29 Aug 2025) 7 Raptors

Dinosaur Ridge - Denver Field Ornithologists
Golden, Colorado, USA

Daily Raptor Counts: Aug 29, 2025
SpeciesDay's CountMonth TotalSeason Total
Black Vulture000
Turkey Vulture011
Osprey000
Bald Eagle000
Northern Harrier000
Sharp-shinned Hawk000
Cooper's Hawk001
American Goshawk000
Red-shouldered Hawk000
Broad-winged Hawk000
Red-tailed Hawk356
Rough-legged Hawk000
Swainson's Hawk23637
Ferruginous Hawk000
Golden Eagle111
American Kestrel012
Merlin000
Peregrine Falcon111
Prairie Falcon001
Mississippi Kite000
Unknown Accipitrine000
Unknown Buteo011
Unknown Falcon000
Unknown Eagle000
Unknown Raptor011
Short-eared Owl000
Total:74752


Observation start time: 08:00:00
Observation end time: 12:00:00
Total observation time: 4 hours
Official CounterAjit Antony
Observers: Liza Antony



Visitors:
One hiker asked how the count was going.

Weather:
Weather.gov predicted 30% cloud cover, but at the watch it was 60% and increasing to 90% earth.nullschool.net showed streaming winds from the WNW from California and Utah. The National Weather Service's Soaring forecast (surprising in view of the heavily overcast skies) was excellent with 4.9 m/sec lift with the maximum height of thermals predicted at 8776 feet above ground level! Perhaps they were calculating it based on a 30% cloud cover. Humidity was high at 41% dropping to 32%, winds were light from the SW>ENE, temperature 21>26Ă‚° Celsius, excellent visibility at 24 km with no haziness.

Raptor Observations:
Exploratory fall count 2025. See https://groups.google.com/g/cobirds/c/Oznn4uc6MBk All migrant raptors were very high and far to the West, so it fit with the soaring forecast. The first migrant was an RT over the western ridge at 9:23 AM MDT. We had 2 more RT, 2 SW, and an adult GE which posed a diagnostic challenge as it was really very high, completely tucked in in a strong glide, it did not flap even once, but the wide wings and a more prominent head clinched the ID. Birds of the day: We heard an odd call at 11:35 a.m. that we didn't know, coming downslope west of us, but we couldn't see any birds there. Liza had put on Merlin for the sound ID, and she said that it identified peregrines! This was a call we hadn't heard before. She then found two of them flying moderately close, easily visible with the naked eye. One was larger, a female, was molting a left 8th primary and a few secondaries, the other was smaller and likely a male. They flew together gaining height. At one point they faced each other presenting talons, without locking them. I followed one and Liza followed the other, and one of them flew to the SE, eventually just gliding. We couldn't remember which was the one that migrated, but at 11:51 AM when an immature RT flow low over the watch to the east we saw the female PG high overhead, and later at noon we saw it patrolling further South, so we realized that it was escorting migrants out of its territory. Presenting talons appears to be its territorial defense. Non-migrant raptors: 2 Adult GE to the NW flew North, RT 2, TV 8. The last 1.5 hours yielded no migrants, so we thought the flight was over for the day, and left.

Non-raptor Observations:
White-throated Swift 1, Barn Swallow 3, White-breasted Nuthatch interior West subspecies heard, House Finch 1, Downy Woodpecker 1. 1 paraglider who seemed to have lift only up to the height of the tallest antenna over Lookout Mountain.

Predictions:
Light winds Starting at 9:00 AM from the NNE changing to NE, a 32% chance of rain all morning increasing to a likely 55% by noon, with the usual chance of lightning at 12 noon becoming more likely by 3:00 PM.


Report submitted by Official Counter of the day shown above (dinoridgehw@gmail.com)
Dinosaur Ridge - Denver Field Ornithologists information may be found at: www.dinosaurridgehawkwatch.org
More information at hawkcount.org: [Site Profile] [Day Summary] [Month Summary]




Site Description
Dinosaur Ridge is the only regularly staffed hawk watch in Colorado and is the
best place in the world to see migrating Ferruginous Hawks. Hawk watchers may
see 17 species of migrating raptors; and it is an excellent site to see rare
dark morph buteos including Broad-winged hawk, Swainson’s hawk, Ferruginous
hawk, Rough-legged hawk and Red-tailed Hawk. Other raptors we see include Golden
and Bald Eagles, Northern harrier, Osprey, Peregrine Falcons, Prairie Falcons,
Cooper's and Sharp-shinned Hawks, American Kestrels, Merlin, and Turkey
Vultures. American Goshawk is uncommon but also counted each season. Non-raptor
species include Rock Wren, Bushtit, Western Bluebird, Sandhill Crane,
White-throated Swift, American White Pelican, and Dusky Grouse. Birders of any
skill level are always welcome. The hawk watch at Dinosaur Ridge is staffed by
Hawk Counter(s) and volunteers from March through early May.

Directions to site:
From exit 259 on I-70 towards Morrison, drive south under freeway and take left
into first parking lot, the Stegosaurus lot. Follow hawk watch signs from the
southwest end of the parking lot to the hawk watch site. The hike starts heading
east on an old two-track and quickly turns south onto a trail on the west side
of the ridge. When the trail nears the top of the ridge, turn left, and walk to
the flat area at the crest of the ridge. (Distance: 0.56 miles, Elevation gain:
259 feet)

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[cobirds] Chico Basin Ranch- Bird Conservancy of the Rockies

Today the crew cleared net lanes and set-up nets. We operated the nets for about 3 hours and caught 35 new birds. My favorite birds were captured in the net- Common Grackles! At least I had help with the big birds- They are not yellow- (Big Bird is yellow). :) Anyhow, the highlights for the day besides COGRs was an Olive-sided Flycatcher- such a large bill and it was great to compare size with the Western Wood-Pewee. A male MacGillivray's Warbler and a Northern Waterthrush graced us with their presence. An Ash-throated Flycatcher that was banded this spring is still hanging around the banding station. 

35 New Banded Birds
Western Wood-pewee-5
Dusky Flycatcher-1
Olive-sided Flycatcher-1
Wilson's Warbler-10
MacGillivray's Warbler-1
Northern Waterthrush-1
Northern House Wren-2
American Goldfinch-1
Lesser Goldfinch-1
Swainson's Thrush-1
Western Tanager-1
Brewer's Sparrow-1
Lazuli Bunting-1
Brown Thrasher-2
Common Grackle-6

1 Return
Ash-throated Flycatcher

The station will be open tomorrow around sunrise until noonish and closed on Sundays. If you wish to visit the banding station or bird the ranch you need to sign up on the Aiken Audubon website www.aikenaudubon.com . Note: I was told that after banding each day the goats from the ranch will have free run of the banding station. I imagine it won't interfere as it most likely will be after 1 PM when folks are to be off the ranch.

Have a good day and hope to see you out at the banding station.

Julie Shieldcastle
Chico Basin Ranch Bird Bander
Bird Conservancy of the Rockies

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[cobirds] Support COBC teams!

COBirders,
The fifth annual Colorado Birding Challenge takes place on Sept. 6, a week from tomorrow!

As of today, there are 29 teams registered spanning 20 counties! It's not too late to register your team and take part in the fun!

You can help to make this year's COBC the best ever by supporting one or more teams with a donation or pledging an amount per species. CFO maintains the list of COBC teams on the COBC webpage. Simply click the team you want to support and follow a few simple steps. Your contribution will support CFO and our Conservation Programs!

Good birding,

Peter Burke
CFO Board of Directors

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Thursday, 28 August 2025

Re: [cobirds] Shorebirds at Blanca Wetlands

Hi John,

Thank you for sharing your list of spectacular birds.

It's a shame that there appears to be no eBird reviewer for Alamosa County. I saw Snowy Plovers there on July 21 and posted lots of pics. https://ebird.org/checklist/S261799783

Nothing seen there in 2025 has been reviewed and approved. I know being a reviewer is a lot of work. I hope someone can fill in at some point.

Best regards, Peter Williams


-----------
Peter Williams (he/him)
Buddhist Meditation Teacher
Emotional Wellness Consultant
Ecodharma Center Founder, Ward CO
303-476-0726
ptrwllms98@gmail.com
http://www.truehomewithin.net/
-----------

On Aug 28, 2025, at 7:39 PM, John Rawinski <johnrawinski0@gmail.com> wrote:

Wife Lisa and I birded the area today and found 15 species of shorebirds including 4 plovers (Snowy, Semi-pal, Black-bellied and killdeer). Others species were Pectoral and Stilt Sandpipers, Least, Bairds and Western. Surprisingly we missed Spotted! 

A bonus was a juvenile Sabine's Gull. 

For those interested ponds 114 and North Mallard area had the best assortment. The area can be walked behind the closed gates. 

John Rawinski
Monte Vista, CO 

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[cobirds] Shorebirds at Blanca Wetlands

Wife Lisa and I birded the area today and found 15 species of shorebirds including 4 plovers (Snowy, Semi-pal, Black-bellied and killdeer). Others species were Pectoral and Stilt Sandpipers, Least, Bairds and Western. Surprisingly we missed Spotted! 

A bonus was a juvenile Sabine's Gull. 

For those interested ponds 114 and North Mallard area had the best assortment. The area can be walked behind the closed gates. 

John Rawinski
Monte Vista, CO 

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[cobirds] Dinosaur Ridge - Denver Field Ornithologists (28 Aug 2025) 2 Raptors

Dinosaur Ridge - Denver Field Ornithologists
Golden, Colorado, USA

Daily Raptor Counts: Aug 28, 2025
SpeciesDay's CountMonth TotalSeason Total
Black Vulture000
Turkey Vulture011
Osprey000
Bald Eagle000
Northern Harrier000
Sharp-shinned Hawk000
Cooper's Hawk001
American Goshawk000
Red-shouldered Hawk000
Broad-winged Hawk000
Red-tailed Hawk023
Rough-legged Hawk000
Swainson's Hawk23435
Ferruginous Hawk000
Golden Eagle000
American Kestrel012
Merlin000
Peregrine Falcon000
Prairie Falcon001
Mississippi Kite000
Unknown Accipitrine000
Unknown Buteo011
Unknown Falcon000
Unknown Eagle000
Unknown Raptor011
Short-eared Owl000
Total:24045


Observation start time: 09:00:00
Observation end time: 11:15:00
Total observation time: 2.25 hours
Official CounterLiza Antony
Observers:



Visitors:
2 women were wondering what I was doing, I explained that I was counting migrating raptors. They were hiking.

Weather:
At the start of the observation. Temperature was 21Ă‚°C with level two winds from the north east. Cloud cover was 50% mostly in the west and north of the watch. At the end of the observation period cloud cover was 70% and it started drizzling. Humidity was fairly high at 55, 63 and 47%.. Visibility was excellent at 24.km.

Raptor Observations:
Only two migratingSwanson Hawks noted migrating at 9:30 MST over the Western Ridge going south. I tried to find the birds with my scope, but was not able to see the birds in my scope to age the birds. Non-migrant raptors: 1 UB noted at 9:27 MST over Lookout mtn; TV-2; RT-2

Non-raptor Observations:
Exploratory fall count 2025. See https://groups.google.com/g/cobirds/c/Oznn4uc6MBk Northern Flicker 1, BTHU 2, Violet â€" green swallow 3, Canyon wren 1 heard the call note 1st and subsequently saw the bird on a snag, Woodhouse's Scrub Jay 3

Predictions:
40 % cloud cover at 9 AM with winds from NW, changing to NE. Rain expected around 1 PM


Report submitted by Official Counter of the day shown above (dinoridgehw@gmail.com)
Dinosaur Ridge - Denver Field Ornithologists information may be found at: www.dinosaurridgehawkwatch.org
More information at hawkcount.org: [Site Profile] [Day Summary] [Month Summary]




Site Description
Dinosaur Ridge is the only regularly staffed hawk watch in Colorado and is the
best place in the world to see migrating Ferruginous Hawks. Hawk watchers may
see 17 species of migrating raptors; and it is an excellent site to see rare
dark morph buteos including Broad-winged hawk, Swainson’s hawk, Ferruginous
hawk, Rough-legged hawk and Red-tailed Hawk. Other raptors we see include Golden
and Bald Eagles, Northern harrier, Osprey, Peregrine Falcons, Prairie Falcons,
Cooper's and Sharp-shinned Hawks, American Kestrels, Merlin, and Turkey
Vultures. American Goshawk is uncommon but also counted each season. Non-raptor
species include Rock Wren, Bushtit, Western Bluebird, Sandhill Crane,
White-throated Swift, American White Pelican, and Dusky Grouse. Birders of any
skill level are always welcome. The hawk watch at Dinosaur Ridge is staffed by
Hawk Counter(s) and volunteers from March through early May.

Directions to site:
From exit 259 on I-70 towards Morrison, drive south under freeway and take left
into first parking lot, the Stegosaurus lot. Follow hawk watch signs from the
southwest end of the parking lot to the hawk watch site. The hike starts heading
east on an old two-track and quickly turns south onto a trail on the west side
of the ridge. When the trail nears the top of the ridge, turn left, and walk to
the flat area at the crest of the ridge. (Distance: 0.56 miles, Elevation gain:
259 feet)

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[cobirds] Bird Conservancy of the Rockies - Barr Banding Report 8/28/25

Welcome back, Tony!  Your name came up today at the banding station, as it does from time to time when we are discussing banding station history.........which we tend to do when there are no birds to occupy our time........

There was only a bit of fog this morning, but still very few birds around.  Again, only 6 birds - 4 Wilson's Warblers, 1 Yellow Warbler, and 1 House Wren.

Our visitor hours: Weekends we will run 3 sessions, at 8, 9, and 10 a.m.  Weekdays (Tues through Fri) there will be a 7:30 to 8:30 session.   These are small group sessions (15 or fewer visitors), and a great way to learn more about the species that move through the front range in the fall.  There is a $7 fee and registration is required - click here to register.

Meredith McBurney
Bander - Barr Lake Banding Station
Bird Conservancy of the Rockies


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[cobirds] Denver Fall Bird Counts 12-15 September 2025


Please join us for the 46th Denver Fall Bird Count over the second weekend of September.  As part of this long-term citizen science monitoring program, we will count all the birds we can find in each of 7 areas.  If you would like to be part of this effort, please contact the leader for an area you would like to participate in for the count.

Cherry Creek State Park   Fri 12 Sept      Cynthia Madsen  cmadsen08@gmail.com   
Barr Lake State Park       Fri 12 Sept      Charlie Chase    charlesachase3@gmail.com 
Chatfield State Park        Sat 13 Sept    Joey Kellner      vireo1@comcast.net
Castlewood Canyon SP  Sun 14 Sept   Dave Hill         davidhill2357@gmail.com
Rocky Mountain Arsenal  Sun 14 Sept   Charlie Chase (group full)
Audubon Nature Center and Roxborough Road   Sun 14 Sept  Julia Quinn                                                                                                               jgwinn53@aol.com
Bear Creek Lake Park        Mon 15 Sept  Mary Geder   mfg5000@live.com

other questions please contact Charlie Chase charlesachase3@gmail.com

Charlie Chase 
Denver



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[cobirds] Bird locations

Hi all:

After a very long hiatus from Cobirds, I have signed up again. Not being afraid of controversy, I thought I'd start my new tenure here right!

Thanks at least partly to a Muscovy Duck on the "wrong" side of the Rio Grande many, many moons ago, the American Birding Association (ABA) put its foot down and promulgated specific rules about the listing game as played by ABA and its members. Related to my conversation's topic, ABA's first rule is (taken from ABA Recording Rules & Interpretations - American Birding Association):

(1) The bird must have been within the prescribed area when encountered, and the encounter must have occurred within the prescribed time period.

To be frank, that means that no matter where the birder is standing, sitting, riding, flying, etc., the important aspect of location is where the bird is. In fact, it is the ONLY consideration.

Of course, eBird doesn't care from where birds are reported, at least at small scales. It created its social aspect of the website to generate friendly competition, despite knowing that competition makes some people go a bit crazy, all for the lure of the list and names in lights on whatever geographic region's Top Ten. As I said, eBird doesn't care about some of the particulars; it wants only more and more data, and if their lack of care generates two checklists rather than just one for the same bird at the same place, that's simply delightful.

Enjoy,

Tony Leukering

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Wednesday, 27 August 2025

[cobirds] Dinosaur Ridge - Denver Field Ornithologists (27 Aug 2025) 10 Raptors

Dinosaur Ridge - Denver Field Ornithologists
Golden, Colorado, USA

Daily Raptor Counts: Aug 27, 2025
SpeciesDay's CountMonth TotalSeason Total
Black Vulture000
Turkey Vulture111
Osprey000
Bald Eagle000
Northern Harrier000
Sharp-shinned Hawk000
Cooper's Hawk001
American Goshawk000
Red-shouldered Hawk000
Broad-winged Hawk000
Red-tailed Hawk023
Rough-legged Hawk000
Swainson's Hawk93233
Ferruginous Hawk000
Golden Eagle000
American Kestrel012
Merlin000
Peregrine Falcon000
Prairie Falcon001
Mississippi Kite000
Unknown Accipitrine000
Unknown Buteo011
Unknown Falcon000
Unknown Eagle000
Unknown Raptor011
Short-eared Owl000
Total:103843


Observation start time: 09:15:00
Observation end time: 12:45:00
Total observation time: 3.5 hours
Official CounterAjit Antony
Observers: Liza Antony



Visitors:
A young man, a hiker wanted to know what we were looking at. I explained that we were counting migrating hawks and eagles, and he was quite surprised that birds migrated! I explained that in spring and fall there are millions of birds which fly at night over his home, and most lay people are totally unaware of this migration.

Weather:
Weather.gov predicted light NE winds with 84% cloud cover dropping by 11:00 AM to 67% and increasing to 77% in the afternoon. The winds aloft the according to earth.nullschool.net were from the NNW At 13 km per hour. At the watch there was 80% cloud cover which dropped to 40%, then 55%, then 60% with plenty of sunshine. Humidity was fairly high at 49, 60, 53, 51%. Visibility was excellent at 24 km. At 1:45 PM MDT there was a persistent drizzle, so I ended the watch.

Raptor Observations:
Exploratory fall count 2025. See https://groups.google.com/g/cobirds/c/Oznn4uc6MBk The first Swainson's Hawk was an adult at 10:28 AM MDT seen over the Western Ridge, but it needed my scope to identify it as to age, as with 4 other SW. While following an SW, it overtook another one which had a molting left outer primary, so I got two for the price of one. While I was looking at a distant raptor to the NW over Lookout Mountain 4 miles away (it was a TV flying North) I saw another raptor in the field of view of my scope which was an SW gliding rapidly South - lucky. We had 4 SW that we could not age, even with a 20-60x scope.

Non-raptor Observations:
I got to the watch late as there was a truck on I-70 just beyond the exit for Rte. 93 which had spilled hazardous material in the westbound lane, so the highway was closed. It took me one hour 15 minutes to travel the 1.3 miles from the entrance to Rte 470 to my exit, it having taken me 1 hour 45 minutes from home where normally takes it between 30 and 45 minutes. We had a great look from the watch, where we saw 6 men with hazardous suits spraying some foamy stuff on the road. It took till 12:30 PM until the eastbound lanes were open, and when I left the westbound lanes were still closed. White-breasted Nuthatch interior subspecies heard, Northern Flicker heard, Violet-green Swallow 8, Common Raven 3.

Predictions:
Light winds starting from the north at 9:00 AM changing to NE, With only 46% cloud cover increasing in the afternoon, with the usual chance of rain and thunderstorms by 11:00 AM, likely risk by 3:00 PM.


Report submitted by Official Counter of the day shown above (dinoridgehw@gmail.com)
Dinosaur Ridge - Denver Field Ornithologists information may be found at: www.dinosaurridgehawkwatch.org
More information at hawkcount.org: [Site Profile] [Day Summary] [Month Summary]




Site Description
Dinosaur Ridge is the only regularly staffed hawk watch in Colorado and is the
best place in the world to see migrating Ferruginous Hawks. Hawk watchers may
see 17 species of migrating raptors; and it is an excellent site to see rare
dark morph buteos including Broad-winged hawk, Swainson’s hawk, Ferruginous
hawk, Rough-legged hawk and Red-tailed Hawk. Other raptors we see include Golden
and Bald Eagles, Northern harrier, Osprey, Peregrine Falcons, Prairie Falcons,
Cooper's and Sharp-shinned Hawks, American Kestrels, Merlin, and Turkey
Vultures. American Goshawk is uncommon but also counted each season. Non-raptor
species include Rock Wren, Bushtit, Western Bluebird, Sandhill Crane,
White-throated Swift, American White Pelican, and Dusky Grouse. Birders of any
skill level are always welcome. The hawk watch at Dinosaur Ridge is staffed by
Hawk Counter(s) and volunteers from March through early May.

Directions to site:
From exit 259 on I-70 towards Morrison, drive south under freeway and take left
into first parking lot, the Stegosaurus lot. Follow hawk watch signs from the
southwest end of the parking lot to the hawk watch site. The hike starts heading
east on an old two-track and quickly turns south onto a trail on the west side
of the ridge. When the trail nears the top of the ridge, turn left, and walk to
the flat area at the crest of the ridge. (Distance: 0.56 miles, Elevation gain:
259 feet)

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Posted by india taking at 16:48 No comments:
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[cobirds] Bird Conservancy of the Rockies - Barr Banding Report 8/27/25

A dense, soupy fog covered Barr Lake and the surrounding area when we arrived this morning; it took several hours for it to burn off.......I think the sun started to come out about 10 a.m.  We opened most nets late, and even in a good season would probably not have caught many birds.  As it is........only 6 new birds today:

Willow Flycatcher 1
Western Flycatcher 1
Yellow Warbler 3
Common Yellowthroat 1

Sigh........

Our visitor hours: Weekends we will run 3 sessions, at 8, 9, and 10 a.m.  Weekdays (Tues through Fri) there will be a 7:30 to 8:30 session.   These are small group sessions (15 or fewer visitors), and a great way to learn more about the species that move through the front range in the fall.  There is a $7 fee and registration is required - click here to register. 

Meredith McBurney
Bander - Barr Lake Banding Station
Bird Conservancy of the Rockies

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Tuesday, 26 August 2025

[cobirds] Bird Conservancy of the Rockies - Barr Banding Report 8/26/25

Things continue at what I believe is a record slow pace, today capturing only 8 new birds for the season:

Western Wood-Pewee 1
Northern House Wren 2 new, 1 banding last year
Yellow Warbler 3
American Redstart 1 (lovely hatch year male; always a treat!)

Our visitor hours: Weekends we will run 3 sessions, at 8, 9, and 10 a.m.  Weekdays (Tues through Fri) there will be a 7:30 to 8:30 session.   These are small group sessions (15 or fewer visitors), and a great way to learn more about the species that move through the front range in the fall.  There is a $7 fee and registration is required - click here to register. 

Meredith McBurney
Bander - Barr Lake Banding Station
Bird Conservancy of the Rockies

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[cobirds] Dinosaur Ridge - Denver Field Ornithologists (26 Aug 2025) 1 Raptors

Dinosaur Ridge - Denver Field Ornithologists
Golden, Colorado, USA

Daily Raptor Counts: Aug 26, 2025
SpeciesDay's CountMonth TotalSeason Total
Black Vulture000
Turkey Vulture000
Osprey000
Bald Eagle000
Northern Harrier000
Sharp-shinned Hawk000
Cooper's Hawk001
American Goshawk000
Red-shouldered Hawk000
Broad-winged Hawk000
Red-tailed Hawk023
Rough-legged Hawk000
Swainson's Hawk12324
Ferruginous Hawk000
Golden Eagle000
American Kestrel012
Merlin000
Peregrine Falcon000
Prairie Falcon001
Mississippi Kite000
Unknown Accipitrine000
Unknown Buteo011
Unknown Falcon000
Unknown Eagle000
Unknown Raptor011
Short-eared Owl000
Total:12833


Observation start time: 08:00:00
Observation end time: 11:15:00
Total observation time: 3.25 hours
Official CounterAjit Antony
Observers:


Weather:
weather.gov for Golden predicted 70% cloud cover so Liza stayed home, as last week with a similar prediction the actual cloud cover at the watch was 90% with few migrants. I went to the watch to see if this was a consistent phenomenon, and at the watch there was only about 45% cloud cover, high cirrus clouds with filtered sunlight. I wondered whether this would be enough to create adequate thermals or not. I checked earth.nullschool.net which showed that the winds aloft were light and from the south, which may explain why there were very few migrant raptors. Near the end of the watch, when the ridges to the South became very dark, and because of the risk of lightning, my My Lightning app showed 50+ lightning strikes to the West only 15 miles away near Aspen Park. Every Denverite knows of the daily afternoon thunderstorms in summer.

Raptor Observations:
Only one migrant today, a Swainson's Hawk at 11:45 AM MDT seen to the SW initially, which flew SE initially, then circled gaining height. I was binocular scanning between North and SW every 1-2 minutes, including higher up, later in the morning. Non migrant Raptors: TV 4, RT 2.

Non-raptor Observations:
Rock Wren 1, Barn Swallow 1, Violet-green Swallow 6, Red-breasted Nuthatch heard twice, Woodhouse's Scrub-Jay 6, Common Raven 7. A paraglider at 11:00 AM did not seem to have much lift, 5 more at 11:45 a.m. who got only a little higher than the antennae on Lookout Mountain, and who in my opinion were foolhardy as there were lightning strikes already to the West a scant 15 miles away. You can be struck by lightning from more than 10 miles away, and even up to 25 miles away, even without hearing thunder. Yes, paragliders can be struck by lightning. A Chinese man was killed paragliding in Australia in 2006, while a German woman was sucked up by the same storm, rising a potentially lethal 9144 feet, and survived.

Predictions:
Patchy fog before 9:00 AM, increasing chance of rain and lightning after 2:00 PM, with winds from the SE>E>NE, so I will count in the morning.


Report submitted by Official Counter of the day shown above (dinoridgehw@gmail.com)
Dinosaur Ridge - Denver Field Ornithologists information may be found at: www.dinosaurridgehawkwatch.org
More information at hawkcount.org: [Site Profile] [Day Summary] [Month Summary]




Site Description
Dinosaur Ridge is the only regularly staffed hawk watch in Colorado and is the
best place in the world to see migrating Ferruginous Hawks. Hawk watchers may
see 17 species of migrating raptors; and it is an excellent site to see rare
dark morph buteos including Broad-winged hawk, Swainson’s hawk, Ferruginous
hawk, Rough-legged hawk and Red-tailed Hawk. Other raptors we see include Golden
and Bald Eagles, Northern harrier, Osprey, Peregrine Falcons, Prairie Falcons,
Cooper's and Sharp-shinned Hawks, American Kestrels, Merlin, and Turkey
Vultures. American Goshawk is uncommon but also counted each season. Non-raptor
species include Rock Wren, Bushtit, Western Bluebird, Sandhill Crane,
White-throated Swift, American White Pelican, and Dusky Grouse. Birders of any
skill level are always welcome. The hawk watch at Dinosaur Ridge is staffed by
Hawk Counter(s) and volunteers from March through early May.

Directions to site:
From exit 259 on I-70 towards Morrison, drive south under freeway and take left
into first parking lot, the Stegosaurus lot. Follow hawk watch signs from the
southwest end of the parking lot to the hawk watch site. The hike starts heading
east on an old two-track and quickly turns south onto a trail on the west side
of the ridge. When the trail nears the top of the ridge, turn left, and walk to
the flat area at the crest of the ridge. (Distance: 0.56 miles, Elevation gain:
259 feet)

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