Summer Birding at the Keystone Ski Resort Area

Mountain Bird Watching near Denver Excellent for Migratory Birds

© Bob Bowers

Aug 24, 2009
Broad-tailed Hummingbird at Keystone Condo, Bob Bowers
Keystone is well known for winter sports, but it's a great summer destination for fishing, mountain biking and hiking, too. Birders will also find it worth their time.

Summit County, only an hour's drive from Denver, Colorado, has been a favorite ski destination for some time. A community association is successfully turning Keystone into a year-round playground for tourists, with free concerts and other activities. Birders drawn to the area for the biking and hiking should also pack their binoculars.

Keystone Ski Resort Near Dillon, Colorado

Just 6 miles from Dillon, at Interstate 70, Keystone's ski area includes 3 mountains, 5 bowls and 20 lifts. Condominium villages at 9,300 feet lie nestled in the pines along the Snake River, and the area is served by a complete range of year-round restaurants and other businesses. A community organization, the Keystone Neighborhood Company, invests in events, concerts and other programs to insure the area's four season viability. One of these events, the Bluegrass and Beer Festival, drew 6,000 during 2 days in August, 2009.

The area in and around Keystone is characterized by mountains, streams and lakes, providing opportunities for summer visitors to hike, bicycle and fish. High altitude hiking can be strenuous, but spectacular scenery, summer wildflowers, waterfalls and alpine lakes reward those willing to brave the thin air. These montane forests also attract breeding migratory birds, which, along with a large number of resident birds, provide added reasons for birders to visit.

Birding in the Keystone Condominium Area

Visitors staying in Keystone's condominiums can see plenty of birds in the immediate area. Anyone interested in hummingbirds should hang at least one hummingbird feeder from their patio, deck or anywhere else it can be seen. The Walmart store in nearby Frisco sells a selection of inexpensive hummingbird feeders. Boil a quarter cup of granulated sugar in a cup of water, let it cool and fill the feeder with this solution to attract hummingbirds. Don't add any food coloring, and keep any leftover solution in your refrigerator.

Hummingbirds that will visit Keystone feeders in the summer include resident Broad-tailed and migratory Rufous. Lucky guests will also draw an occasional Calliope. At times, the hummingbirds will be as thick as bees. There is a small recreational lake in Keystone that attracts Mallards and Blue-winged teal, and the Snake River and adjacent wetland areas draw Violet-green swallows, Wilson's Snipe, and Red-winged Blackbirds. A number of sparrows can be seen at and around the condominiums, including White-crowned, Fox, Vesper, Song and Lincoln, and Cassin's Finches will also visit the condos. Both Red-tailed and Ferruginous Hawks can be seen as well.

Berry bushes around the condominiums attract Mountain Bluebirds. Mountain Chickadees, Hairy Woodpeckers, Northern Flickers, Dark-eyed Juncos and Steller's Jays can be seen in nearby pines, and brushy areas around the condominiums are home to Wilson's and Yellow Warblers and Cordilleran Flycatchers. Other common birds in the area include American Crow and American Robin.

Birding Nearby Keystone

There are many hiking destinations within a few miles of Keystone that provide excellent birding, including Lily Pad Lakes, Lower Cataract Lake, Shrine Ridge and Loveland Pass, to name just a few. Birds found in these nearby areas include Black-billed Magpies, Cedar Waxwings, Pine Siskins, Pine Grosbeaks, Green-tailed Towhees and Western Tanagers. The lakes produce Canada Geese, California Gull, Osprey, Willow Flycatcher and Lesser Scaup. Forested slopes show both Red-breasted and White-breasted Nuthatches, Brown Creeper, Western Wood Peewee, Red-naped Sapsucker, Gray Jays, Downy Woodpecker and Clark's Nutcracker.

Higher elevations are good places to find American Pipit, Golden Eagle, Ruby-crowned Kinglet and Townsend's Solitaire. Trailside brushy areas, particularly near streams, often show Yellow-rumped, MacGillivray's and Virginia's Warblers, among many others.

Colorado Ski Resorts are Great Summertime Birding Areas

Popular high-activity destinations like Keystone are often thought to be poor places to find birds. To the contrary, these areas are rich with summer migrants and residents, and are well worth putting on a birder's itinerary. Keystone lies in the White River National Forest, and the national forest's published bird list shows nearly 200 species that have been seen in the area.


The copyright of the article Summer Birding at the Keystone Ski Resort Area in Bird Watching is owned by Bob Bowers. Permission to republish Summer Birding at the Keystone Ski Resort Area in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.


Broad-tailed Hummingbird at Keystone Condo, Bob Bowers
Gray Jay at Lily Pad Lake, Colorado, Bob Bowers
Broad-tailed and Rufous Hummingbirds , Bob Bowers
Mountain Bluebird at Keystone Condo, Colorado, Bob Bowers
Rufous Hummingbird at Keystone Condo, Colorado, Bob Bowers


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