Hello Thomas and everyone,

Thanks for the fun thread. I see that I can help you "tick off" one of the 
currently missing species: Tundra Swan. 
https://ebird.org/checklist/S61420925

I live on the edge of the Lac Amora Open Space in Broomfield at about 
5400’, and am fortunate to have a prairie dog colony outside my backyard, 
and am in close proximity to Stearns Lake in Boulder County, just to the 
north.

I’m a pretty dedicated yard lister, and in the 5 years I’ve been using 
eBird to keep my yard list, I’ve logged 130 species, including all three 
species of bluebirds, both shrikes, the four hummers, over a dozen species 
of sparrows, both waxwings, and just about all the diurnal raptors that 
typically occur in CO.

My most memorable yard bird was the time I looked outside to see what 
appeared to be a Redtail sitting on my back lawn. This was a bit strange, 
and as I stared at the bird, it became apparent it was too big to be a 
hawk, and I realized there was a Golden Eagle on my lawn. I took photos 
from the house at first, and then steeped outside, assuming it would fly 
away, but it did not. It became apparent the bird was injured, so I 
captured it (I used to volunteer for Birds of Prey Foundation), and brought 
it to Birds of Prey https://ebird.org/checklist/S165144647

Probably my rarest bird occurred when we had just returned from Australia, 
and I was sort of lamenting to my wife how in general, the birds in 
Colorado are so much less colorful than the ones we’d been seeing on our 
trip, when I looked out my living room window to see a male Scarlet Tanager 
in the yard. That was good fun. https://ebird.org/checklist/S56817229

Chris Petrizzo, Broomfield

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
>

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