All posts by Neighbor

About Neighbor

I've been in the Second Filing of Glacier View Meadows since 2017.

GVM Birdlist

As the season warms up, the birds return to our mountain neighborhood.

Ever wonder how many different birds we’ve seen here over the years?

Rufous Hummingbird

We have folks who’ve lived here who have made a record for us. Among the earliest were Howard and Mary Alice Evans, who lived in a cliff-top home in Filing 7, facing the Mummy Range.

Howard was a devoted naturalist, a noted entomologist, faculty member of Colorado State University; Mary Alice was a science educator who co-authored several of Howard’s noted books and articles.

While they explored our trails and open spaces, they created the stopping points along the way in Crellin Trail, as they wrote about in their book A Naturalist’s Years in the Rocky Mountains.

They also started a Birdlist, which was updated after they moved back to the city and kept alive by a later resident, Jim Chisholm, who created a new list in 2000. Recently, we came across this treasure of a record as we’ve been redoing the Glacier View Meadows website.

2019 GVM Resident Terry Campbell has shared his expertise as a biologist to update the list, reorganize it by bird family names, and create a newer, user-friendly format. He verified the accuracy with neighbors Morris Clark and David Robertson.

We share it with the GVM community now.

Thanks for your work on this, Terry.

Mountain Living Speaker Series: Wildfire Mitigation

We got two for one in this week’s premier for the 2024 Mountain Living Speaker Series. We planned to hear from Raina Eshleman from the Larimer County Sheriff’s Office.

Coming along with her was a local partner in the program she’s administering, Tom Hausfeld, who is Coordinator for the Fire Adapted Community Alliance (FACA), a committee of the Board of the Glacier View Fire Protection District.

Here’s the 50-minute program with both speakers. Skip to 5:25 minutes in, to avoid the technical and distracting elements from the live presentation.

Raina presented a tool the Sheriff’s Office is offering that enables full documentation of home hardening measures to assist in homeowner insurance issues that seem to be emerging with wildland interface fires.

The Home Ignition Zone Assessment is done by two volunteer ambassadors from the local fire-protection district, with a focus on identifying for homeowner use any areas of increased risk for wildfire.

Raina went step-by-step through the Assessment, to give concrete examples of what the ambassadors do and to show what the final report looks like.

The results of this assessment can also support a growing number of grant opportunities to help fund home improvements, such as the Community Wildfire Defense Grant Program, from the US Forest Service.

Tom, a neighbor of Glacier View Meadows living in Red Feather Highlands, gave a brief review of community wildfire preparation efforts.

He described the four initiatives of the Community Wildfire Protection Plan (CWPP):

  • Annual Firewise Event
  • Grant seeking
  • Ambassadors doing the Assessment
  • Active mitigation of hazards in our common areas.

Finally, he spent time explaining the challenges of managing the by-product of mitigation, the accumulation of cuttings as slash piles.

A solution to the challenges has been the development among communities and agencies to acquire and operate an Air Burner device, essentially a large dumpster with a forced air fan technology that scours the air and provides total elimination of all residues.

A demonstration of an Air Burner is scheduled for Saturday morning, April 27, at Gate 3 of Glacier View Meadows. Watch for announcement of details.

Tom finished his presentation with an appeal for volunteers. He and his team are looking for folks to sign up for the Home Ignition Zone Assessment, and the program is looking for volunteers for each of the four committees, plus the need for support in public communication, particular with their website and with postings to Next Door.

For more information or to volunteer, contact the Glacier View Fire Protection District, either on their website or directly by telephone at 970.493.3353.

2024 Mountain Living Series

This year’s programming once again includes inspiration, encouragement, and guidance in making the most of the world we live in.

April 9: Fire Mitigation in Larimer County, from the Sheriff’s Office Wildlife Partner Program.

May 14: Wildflowers! From Margie Caswell, pictures and stories.

June 11: Weed and Cheatgrass, our annual program from great Larimer County Weed District resource, Casey Cisneros, and our local specialist, Ted Sammond.

June 15: Weed Management Field Day, with hands on guidance and access to materials.

July 9: Brock McArdle, Colorado Parks and Wildlife, with his Canine Partner Cash.

August 13: Solar energy in the Mountains, with Solar Sandbox specialist Justin Wojtarowicz.

September 10: Culturally Modified Trees. WTH are they? Pretty interesting angle on local history.

October 10: Bird Conservancy of the Rockies.

For more information, check out the GVM Ecology Website.

Once again this year, we give thanks to our Ecology Team Series coordinators, Susie and Terry Campbell and Beth and Jim Lyne.

Evening Grosbeak

Large finch, nearly twice the size of a goldfinch. Stocky with strong, thick, pale bill and short, notched tail. Males are stunning with dark head fading to bright yellow underparts, and mostly black wings with bright white secondaries. Females are overall gray with some white on the wing. Flocks often come to feeders for sunflower seeds. Found in forested regions especially at higher elevations. Populations declining dramatically.

https://ebird.org/species/evegro

This one was at Gate 9, on March 28, 2023. We’ve entered him in the Glacier View Meadows Nature Calendar. Check it out if you’d like to see who else comes this time of year.

Interested in who else visits our neighborhood? Take a look at the Ecology Team Birds page.

Speaker Series, 2023

The Glacier View Meadows Ecology Team announces its Speaker Series for the 2023 season, and it’s got something for everyone.

Second Tuesdays of each month, April through October

Glacier View Meadows Community Room at Gate 8

7:00 to 8:00+ pm

April 11: The Trails of Larimer County

May 9: Coalition for the Poudre River Watershed–after the Cameron Peak Fire.

June 13: Weed and Cheatgrass Identification and Management.

Saturday, June 17: Weed Management Field Day.

July 11: Neighborhood Wildlife.

August 8: Well Water Quality.

September 16: Red Feather Water–Past, Present, and Future.

October 10: Animal Behavior.

Details? Take a look at full descriptions at GVMEcology.com!