Hey John, great list… thanks for posting. Surprised no Kinglets!?
Jon Webb
Lyons, CO
Lyons, CO
On Jun 25, 2026, at 11:03 AM, 'Buzz Schaumberg' via Colorado Birds <cobirds@googlegroups.com> wrote:
Love it!
On Thursday, June 25, 2026, 10:53 AM, John Tumasonis <snakemonev@gmail.com> wrote:
All:Some birding and wildflowers at Wild Basin in Rocky Mountain National Park, over the last couple weeks. Compiled from three visits in June. Note: requires a Timed Entry Permit between the hours of 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. If you get there before 9 a.m. you don't need a timed permit, but you will still need your "regular" pass, or pay at gate. The road is bumpy with some potholes, but a a passenger car can make it to the trailhead if going slowly. I broke this down into three sections: the "willow marshes" from Copeland Lake to the Winter Gate; the Ponderosa \ Lodgepole pine forests from the Winter Gate to the main trailhead; and the main trailhead up past Calypso Cascades. Got my boots and feet muddy trudging through marshes.
Pardon my spelling and grammar.
Great Blue Heron - 2 - one at Copeland Lake, the other in the willow marshes\
Spotted Sandpiper - 4 - at two separate ponds.
Wilson's Snipe - 8 - willow marshes; several winnowing displays, alarm calls, and one doing the "broken wing trick" to lure me away from a nest site.
Mallard - 2 at Copeland Lake
MacGillivray's Warbler - 6
Audubon's Warbler - 21 males and females
Wilson's Warbler - 11
Williamson's Sapsucker - 1 male, foraging on a huge ponderosa pine (dead) snag
Northern Flicker - 2
Red Napped Sapsucker - 1 male
Three Toed Woodpecker - 1 male chased off a Douglas fir by a red napped sapsucker
Dusky Flycatcher - 8 - in willow thickets and marsh habitats - one being attacked by a broad tailed hummingbird
Cordilleran Flycatcher - only 1 at the entrance station
Hammond's Flycatcher - 4 in mixed evergreen habitat
Broad Tailed Hummingbird - 14
Brown Creeper - 1
White Breasted Nuthatch - 2
Red Breasted Nuthatch - 6
Pygmy Nuthatch - 6
American Robin - 40+ - the predominant species
Townsend's Solitaire -2
Clark's Nutcracker - 2 flyovers, calling
American Dipper - 4 - at footbridge crossing and at Copeland Falls
Black Headed Grosbeak - 4 - males and females; one nest site found
Western Tanager - 10 - males and females collecting insects
Lincoln's Sparrow - 12 - songs, chases; in willow marshes
Song Sparrow - 12 singing, foraging in willow marshes
Fox Sparrow - 2 singing - in marshes
Violet Green Swallow - 16
Pine Siskin - 15 - flyovers, calling
Mountain Chickadee - 6
Black Capped Chickadee - 4
Gray Headed Junco - 15 - nesting, foraging, songs, calls
Chipping Sparrow - 2
Warbling Vireo - 15
Note: At the winter parking area and road-creek crossing there were dozens of robins, warbling vireos, Audubon's warblers, and Western Tanagers, all flycatching insects over the creek and surrounding forests.
Mammals:Moose - 2Pine Squirrel - 6Golden Mantled Ground Squirrel - 2Chipmunk spp: 2Mule Deer - 1
Flowers were scant, but many species: Stonecrop, Blue Columbine, Baneberry, Sulphurflower, Heart Leaf Arnica, Globeflower, Marsh Marigold, Shooting Star, Elephantshead, Spotted Coralroot, Geyer's Onion, Yarrow, Mouse-Ear, Dandelion, Boulder Raspberry, Wild Rose, Wild Strawberry, Ninebark, Chokecherry, Cinquifoil spp; Wild Geranium, Goldenbanner, Mountain Lupine, Groundsel spp; Mountain Violet, Pussytoes, Pearlyeverlasting, Mountain Ash, Red Elderberry, Blue Clementis, and dozens of others.
John T (Tumasonis)"I'm not a real birder. I only pretend to be one on CoBirds."--
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