How long: About 18 years

Style: moderate

Species count: 117

Notable species: Common Poorwill, Red Crossbill, Brown Thrasher, Cassin’s 
Kingbird, Calliope Hummingbird. Also Greater white-fronted Goose, Snow Goose 
and Ross’s Goose feeding in the farm fields directly behind my house.

Most memorable: The Common Poorwill was flushed by my dog into a neighbor’s 
yard, so I ran next door to find it sitting under one of his pine trees, but it 
flushed again before I could get a photo.

Location: SW Weld county – arable farmland

 

Adrian Lakin

Mead

 

From: [email protected] <[email protected]> On Behalf Of Lauren 
Hyde
Sent: Monday, March 11, 2024 12:18 PM
To: Dan Stringer <[email protected]>
Cc: Colorado Birds <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [cobirds] Re: Yard list questions: How many of CO's 520 species 
have been seen (or heard) from a yard?

 

Length: About 30 years

Style: casual but attentive

# of species: 145

Birds of interest: Lewis’s woodpecker, Lawrence’s goldfinch, Mississippi kite, 
Virginia rail

Most memorable sighting: 4 species of hummers (calliope, rufous, black-chinned, 
and broad-tailed) in one tree all at the same tune, a sage thrasher jumping up 
repeatedly to snatch rose hips of a wild rose bush

Location: southern Weld County

 

Lauren Hyde

Keenesburg





On Mar 11, 2024, at 12:01 PM, 'Dan Stringer' via Colorado Birds 
<[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> > wrote:

I liked your post, Thomas, and I love the notables on your yard list. My 
answers to your questions are:

 

How long: 

14 years.

 

Style: 

Casual but attentive. When the same bear started returning to my feeders daily, 
I took them down for my neighbor's sake and the bear's safety. Lower numbers 
and variety since then, still highly interesting.

 

How many species: 90

 

Rarest, or favorite species: 

American Three-toed Woodpecker. Surprising, lower than 7000' and this far east 
(just west of Larkspur), but I've since seen them and documented breeding in 
nearby Sandstone Ranch where I do surveys. Steep, forested foothills behind my 
neighborhood have brought many species down that are typically at higher 
elevations.

 

Most memorable experience: A male American Goshawk in winter, pursuing a 
squirrel up, down, and around the trees. It was unsuccessful, in close quarters 
the squirrel looked to be far more in it's element.

 

Location/habitat: At base of foothills, 6850', ponderosa pine / gambel oak.

 

Dan Stringer

Larkspur, CO

 

On Monday, March 11, 2024 at 10:40:41 AM UTC-6 Thomas Heinrich 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'

 

-- 

Thomas Heinrich
Boulder, CO
[email protected]
www.pbase.com/birdercellist <http://www.pbase.com/birdercellist> 

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