Our situation in Golden is the same as Hugh's.  We usually have 5 - 10
solitaires around but this year I have heard only 1 and only once.  I guess
they moved to Canon City and other environs.

 

Ira Sanders

Golden, CO

 

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf
Of Hugh Kingery
Sent: Friday, December 10, 2010 8:49 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [cobirds] Solitaires, red-wings -- state-wide

 

Cobirds carries lots of reports about birds that people see, but hardly any
about species that we don't see. I have queries on two:

Townsend's Solitaires: most winters, we have 2-5 on the hillside next to our
home. This year, none to one (none for the last 3 weeks). Have they picked
other sites, such as urban Denver, moved out onto the plains, gone south,
stayed in the mountains, or really declined?

Red-winged Blackbird: One of the people who reports to Denver Audubon's
Backyard Birds commented that he'd seen fewer Red-wings in his yard this
year than usual. Denver Audubon's monthly Walk the Wetlands recorded 142 in
2009; 71 in 2010. A localized phenomenon, or a widespread one? 

Christmas Bird Counts will give us data about these species, but they cover
only a tiny part of our world. Any thoughts?

 

Hugh Kingery 
Franktown, CO

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