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Archive for June, 2009

BIRDING IN COLORADO AND MAINE – June 22-28, 2009

June 29th, 2009 Peter Walker No comments

INTERESTING AND VERY EPHEMERAL MUSHROOM

 

I began the week in Morgan County, Colorado. Now I am in Farmington, Maine some 2,500 miles to the northeast. I arrived here on Friday afternoon and it has hardly stopped raining ever since. On Saturday the sun came out for 3-4 hours in the afternoon and I got out and hiked through mature mixed forest long enough to pick up the songs and a few sightings of some old friends. I’ll be here two more weeks and hope to get out and do some serious birding if the weather ever breaks.

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THE MANY FACES OF THE PLAINS PRICKLYPEAR

June 22nd, 2009 Peter Walker No comments

PLAINS PRICKLYPEAR - PEACH-COLORED

 

            The plains pricklypear (Opuntia polycantha) is very abundant in northeast Colorado growing in a variety of habitats. Most of the year it is ignored by the general public. But in June each year the plains pricklypear asserts itself by coloring the prairie with an amazing array of ornate blossoms ranging from brilliant yellow to a sort of glowing pink to deep pink. The breathtaking show lasts perhaps three weeks and is followed by dark red fruits around the tips of the pads. Both the fruits and pads are edible but must be singed to remove the spines before they can be handled. Coronado and other early explorers of the Llano Estacado in Texas found little to eat except the pricklypear, the staple diet of Native Americans in the region. Read more…

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NATURE IS GREAT IN MORGAN COUNTY! JUNE 15-20, 2009

June 21st, 2009 Peter Walker No comments

PAWNEE'S BIG FISH

CDOW FISHERY BIOLOGIST BEN SWIGLE (CTR) AND SUMMER ASSISTANTS HOIST TWO FRESHWATER DRUM AND TWO HYBRID STRIPED BASS SAMPLED FROM PAWNEE POWER PLANT RESERVOIR IN MORGAN COUNTY, COLORADO. BOTH DRUM PROBABLY EXCEED THE OFFICIAL STATE ANGLING RECORD.

 

It was a great week to be outdoors. It only rained once or twice in Morgan County (a far cry from the previous 10-12 weeks!). My work took me inside the chain-link fences surrounding Pawnee Power Station near Brush to collect virus inspection samples from warm- and coolwater fishes in Pawnee Reservoir. That gave me a look at whatever water birds might be using the 140-acre lake at this time of the year. I found about a dozen western and Clark’s grebes – non-breeders, I presume. Aside from those, there were only white pelicans and double-crested cormorants present.

            I did get an audible on a warbling vireo in the treetops of the cottonwood groves just south of the lake. It is only the first one I’ve come across all year. Can anyone tell me if the decrease is range-wide and why? Read more…

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BIRDING LIST FOR MORGAN COUNTY, COLORADO JUNE 7-14, 2009

June 18th, 2009 Peter Walker No comments

 

COMMON NIGHTHAWK ROOSTING ON A FENCE RAIL

It was an average birding week at the height of breeding season. It will be a week or two yet before the first fall migrants and post-breeding dispersal juveniles show up from other areas. It continues to rain almost every day – something we haven’t seen in these parts for a number of years. Prairie playas that have been dry for a decade or more are now full of water. It should make for a great shorebird migration.

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A WEEK OF INCIDENTAL BIRDING – MAY 31 – JUNE 6, 2009

June 7th, 2009 Peter Walker No comments

california-gull

 

A week ago I was tied to my desk all week. This week I spent four days at least in part in the field. Although none of that time was devoted specifically to birding, it did yield a good-sized list of “incidentals.”

            Monday afternoon and early evening I rode with District Wildlife Manager (translation: Colorado game warden) Todd Cozad of Fort Morgan. His duties took him south into an oilfield in Washington County, then northeastward to Jackson Lake State Park to assist two young field technicians from my program, Ellen Hayes and Brian Heinold, as they took samples in their search for invasive zebra and quagga mussels. Read more…

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