Saturday, October 12, 2024 Bird Walk to Mud Lake with Wild Bear Nature Center

October 15, 2024

This past Saturday was October Big Day, the fall counterpart to Global Big Day where people around the world unite to share their love of our avian friends. In celebration of the day, Front Range Birding teamed up with Wild Bear Nature Center for a bird walk around their new nature center site up at Mud Lake Open Space!

Wild Bear Nature Center is Boulder County’s only year-round nature center. Currently located in Nederland in the Caribou shopping center, Wild Bear’s new location, which is currently under construction, sits on 5 acres of land and boasts access to 16 miles of nature trails. It’s designed from the ground up to include state of the art sustainable building practices like bird-friendly glass to prevent collisions and a net-zero energy footprint through the use of solar power.

Wild Bear staff generously provided coffee and donuts for the event and gave us a look at the construction site, though we weren’t able to enter the fence due to safety concerns (you can schedule a special hard hat tour through their website though if you’re interested in a more in-depth tour). After taking a look at the new center, we split up into groups to bird.

Fall starts a quiet time for foothills birding, so we didn’t see many birds on our trek. The most abundant birds were Common Ravens, Pygmy Nuthatches and chickadees, both Black-capped and Mountain.

One of the easiest ways to tell a Mountain Chickadee from a Black-capped Chickadee is by the Mountain’s white “supercilium” or eyebrow. To me, this eyebrow makes the Mountain look somewhat angry. The Black-capped has a full black cap with no white above the eye. Less noticeable, the Black-capped Chickadee tends to have buffier flanks while the Mountain is more grey overall. Their calls are also different, though this can be hard to hear. The Mountain’s chicka-dee-dee call is raspier, almost like it has a sore throat.

Mountain Chickadee. Photo by Jamie Simo
Black-capped Chickadee. Photo by Jamie Simo

Although not a bird, we’re equal opportunity when it comes to nature here at FRBC and the highlight of the trip was definitely the muskrat we saw in Mud Lake. Often mistaken for beavers, muskrats are much smaller (up to around a foot long versus up to 3 feet long, and 2-4 pounds versus an average of 40 or so pounds). While beavers have a flat, paddle-shaped tail, muskrat tails are long, thin, and slightly vertically flattened. Beavers are strictly herbivorous, meaning they only eat plants such as leaves, shoots, and the inner bark of trees. Muskrats, however, are omnivorous so, in addition to aquatic plants, they’ll also eat crayfish, frogs, and small fish. There aren’t any fish in Mud Lake, so perhaps they’re chowing down on tiger salamanders and chorus frogs.

Muskrat. Photo by Jamie Simo
American beaver. Photo by Dona Hilkey. https://flic.kr/p/w4CUW7

While we only had 8 species for the morning, the good company was more than worth it. We look forward to partnering more with Wild Bear’s staff!

Mud Lake Open Space, Boulder, Colorado, US
8 species

Steller’s Jay  1
Black-billed Magpie  1
American Crow  1
Common Raven  4
Black-capped Chickadee  3
Mountain Chickadee  3
Pygmy Nuthatch  4
Dark-eyed Junco  1

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