December 28, 2011

Mount Sanitas and the Boulder Christmas Bird Count

The 2011 Mount Sanitas CBC Crew
Left to right: Skye Lewis, Marcel Such, Levi Stone, Joel Such


On Sunday, December 18th, we hit the trails of Mount Sanitas for the Boulder Christmas Bird Count.  Though a rather small area for the Boulder circle, this area can take all day because of the miles of trail needing to be covered, and only a tiny section of road in one corner, which de-marks one of the easier habitats to cover, the foothill's suburbs.  Elsewhere, it is foothills Ponderosa Pine forest, with some scattered Wild Plum riparian areas.  These habitats don't have as high a density of birds - typically just a handful of roving wintering flocks of juncos, chickadees, and nuthatches, plus some scattered jays and woodpeckers - but that makes it all the more difficult to obtain accurate counts.  For the previous two years we have covered this area by ourselves, but this year we joined forces with the newly formed Boulder County Audubon Teen Naturalists' program for a great day of hiking and birding.


All photos by Joel Such

Levi Stone on Mount Sanitas against a backdrop of Boulder


The Dakota Ridge Hogback


Sanitas Valley Trail


Black-billed Magpie


American Kestrel


American Robin


Red-tailed Hawk

Golden Eagle


Bushtit (we saw these little guys everywhere!)


Eastern Bluebird (see note below)



(previous years totals in parenthesis)
Canada Goose - 1 (3) 
Sharp-shinned Hawk - 2
Northern Goshawk - 1 flying through Sanitas Valley. 
Red-tailed Hawk - 4 (5) 
Golden Eagle - 1 (1)
American Kestrel - 2 (2)
Rock Pigeon - 43 (28)
Eurasian Collared-Dove - 3 
Downy Woodpecker - 2 (1)
Hairy Woodpecker - 2 (3)
Northern "Red-shafted" Flicker - 12 (12)
Steller's Jay - 39 (35)
Western Scrub-Jay - 3 (3)
Black-billed Magpie - 38 (27)
American Crow - 21 (210!)
Common Raven - 17 (6)
Black-capped Chickadee - 7 (7)
Mountain Chickadee - 14 (16)
Bushtit - 52 (28)
White-breasted Nuthatch - 9 (3)
Pygmy Nuthatch - 71 (39)
Brown Creeper - 4 (2)
Canyon Wren - 2 (1)
Ruby-crowned Kinglet - 1 (2) 
Eastern Bluebird - 1 male, we typically see Western Bluebirds in this area, which is what we originally identified this bird as.  Looking at photographs that Joel took, however, caused us to doubt this assumption.  The correct identification was actually Eastern.  We did not obtain any pictures of the female, so we cannot be certain of its identification.
Bluebird species - 1 female
Townsend's Solitaire - 37 (30)
American Robin - 48 (2)
European Starling - 13 (1)
Spotted Towhee - 17 (1)
Dark-eyed Junco (total) - 129 (167)
     undifferentiated - 56 (71)
     Gray-headed - 34 (62)
     Oregon - 2 (3)
     Pink-sided - 24 (22)
     Slate-colored - 13 (9)
House Finch - 44 (65)
House Sparrow - 12

32 species

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