Thursday, April 21, 2016

TSI Meeting on Saturday!


 If you haven't already signed up or put yourself on the list, let me know!

Hikers Wanted!!!

The Teller County Trail System Initiative (TSI) needs you! We are looking for outdoor enthusiasts to gather information on the trails in Teller County. Become a part of history and do what you love at the same time. Data collected will become a new Trail Guide Publication for Teller County!

April 23, 2016
Woodland Professional Building
400 W Highway 24
Conference Room
Woodland Park, CO 80863
10 am to 12 pm

Sponsored by Guides-To-Go
Let us know you’re coming!
RSVP at www.guides-to-go.com or 720.838.3277
 



Friday, April 1, 2016

On the Move



This is a wonderful time of year in Ute Country, the days are getting warmer, plants begin to sprout and animals are on the move. Migration is the movement of animals from one location to another in response to the changing day length.  There are many reasons animals need to migrate; food availability, habitat needs for raising young and the opportunity to take advantage of more abundant resources, being the most significant.
Last month I had an amazing experience watching birds migrate through the San Luis Valley.  Thousands of Sandhill Cranes and hundreds of thousands of waterfowl were feeding, resting and refueling before heading to their breeding grounds up north.  Northern Colorado, Wyoming and Montana provide more suitable habitat for feeding and raising their young than New Mexico where they spend the winter.  To experience the sights and sounds of this event is awe inspiring and should be experienced at least once.
In our area we see many species that are long distance migrators, coming from miles away to spend the warmer months and those that migrate locally, not going a long distance but traveling from higher to lower elevations.
Mammals
Elk (local migration). The weather is the major factor for Elk migration.  As long as they can find a food source they tend to stay put.  Even in winter they search out open, sunny slopes with forest nearby to protect them from the wind and cold at night.  As heavy snows fall in the high country they must move to lower elevations where food is in the open or covered by less snow.  They spend the summer at higher elevations foraging on new growth of plants and brush, their preferred food.  Elk can be seen at Florissant Fossil beds at various times of the year.
Bighorn sheep (local migration), unlike Elk, have a set route for migration.  The sheep move from rocky slopes of the mountains to grazing grounds at lower elevations each year and will not vary from this route.  Dome rock, near Mueller State Park, is known for its healthy population of Bighorn sheep.  Keep in mind that hiking in Dome Rock is restricted due to the lambing season from December 1st to July 15th annually.  In the spring along CR 1 as you head to Cripple Creek, grazing sheep can be often be spotted eating in the grassy meadows.  This is the Colorado State animal.
Pronghorn (local migration) corridors are located in Fremont and Chaffee counties.  Again, weather is a major factor for migration.  They spend the summer in high mountain prairies, eating grasses, forbs and sagebrush and prefer to be located within a few miles of water.  As the snow begins to fly they must leave for lower elevations having little tolerance for the cold weather.
Birds
Broad-tailed Hummingbird (long distance) This little bird migrates in the spring to our area from Mexico and Central America…amazing!  They race from the lower elevations to the subalpine meadows to find a nesting area.  As the pressure for a nesting site declines they will spread out into the mountains and down to the foothills and plains to spend the summer.
American Robins (local migration).  These beautiful red-breasted birds move from south to north in Colorado following the food.  They eat insects, snails and of course, earthworms.  It seems that these birds are here all year round but in actuality you are looking at the southern populations in the summer and the northern populations in the winter.
Williamson’s Sapsucker (long distance).  A sure sign of spring is the return of this woodpecker.  This bird, like its name suggests, sucks sap.  It drills holes in trees and returns at a later time to feed on this golden liquid.  Ants and other insects that come for the sap become this birds’ meal too.  Look for them in a forest near you.
Lark Bunting (long distance).  Honorable mention, this is the Colorado State bird.  It migrates from Mexico through Colorado and spends the summers in more northern states and Canada.  We will not see this bird in the mountains but on the eastern plains where it eats grains, seeds and insects.
One more migrator:
Humans (long distance and local migration) can travel many miles or come from the nearest city to spend the pleasant summer months in the mountains. The recreational vehicles can be seen moving through our area in high numbers. They come for lakes to fish, water, to float, boat and kayak on and the cooler temperatures.  Every winter that passes I am feeling the need to become a migrator myself.
Enjoy the spring migration and the animals on the move; we will do it in reverse in the fall.