Users 6
Photos 17,245
Comments 1
Views 820,551
Disk Space 1,499.5mb

SunMon TueWed ThuFri Sat
      1
2345678
9101112131415
16171819202122
23242526272829
30      

112-common-snipe-or-wilson-s-snipe-s3.jpg
Common Snipe or Wilson's Snipe
rolljack
2463-horned-puffin-hall-island-s3.jpg
Horned Puffin Hall Island
rolljack
929-sandhill-cranes-and-sunrise-s2.jpg
Sandhill Cranes and Sunrise
theman
324-russian-river-s3.jpg
Russian River
rolljack
482-canada-geese-branta-canadensis-s2.jpg
Canada Geese (Branta canadensis)
theman
78-f-18-super-hornet.jpg
F-18 Super Hornet - Arctic Thunder
afmil
· more ·

 
« more ·
2460-impala-aepyceros-melampus-s2.jpg
<<
2461-impala-aepyceros-melampus-s2.jpg
<
4906-alamosa-monte-vista-national-wildlife-refuge-s3.jpg
·

Alamosa/Monte Vista National Wildlife Refuge
Click on image to view larger image

rolljack



Registered: May 2008
Posts: 8,133
users gallery

Alamosa and Monte Vista National Wildlife Refuges are adjacent refuges in southern Colorado. Alamosa is on the upper end of the Rio Grande while Monte Vista is just west of there. They share some interesting features and wildlife. From an 80-foot bluff at Alamosa, visitors can get an eagle's-eye view of one of the last unspoiled stretches of the upper Rio Grande. Seventy or more bald eagles gather here in March and April to feast on winter-killed fish in the frozen oxbows of the Rio Grande. In addition, golden eagles, northern harriers, Swainson's hawks, and rough-legged hawks hunt in the adjoining meadows. Beavers, muskrats, and cliff swallows all use the river resources for their homes. The beavers and muskrats build their homes right in the river or in the riverbank while cliff swallows gather mud from the riverbank to build their nests on any convenient vertical surface. At Monte Vista, sandhill cranes are the story. As many as 10,000 of these magnificent birds leap, bow, and flutter their wings in their curious courtship dance every spring. A 3-mile auto-tour route and 12 miles of county roads take the visitor to many of the 100 or so small ponds surrounded by the majestic Rockies that make up Monte Vista Refuge. Both Monte Vista and Alamosa are home to mule deer, bobcats, coyotes, elk, and pronghorn antelope, as well as a host of waterfowl, herons, and egrets. Prairie and peregrine falcons are also found here. Both refuges offer excellent opportunities for wildlife observation photography, and hiking.





· Date: Wed May 28, 2008 · Views: 49 · Filesize: 50.5kb, 108.8kb · Dimensions: 960 x 768 ·
Tags:
Credit: Sanders of Ducks Unlimited, Robert/USFWS
Additional Categories: NCTC Image Library, Coyotes, Deer
Print View



Powered by: PhotoPost PHP
Copyright © 2007 All Enthusiast, Inc.