Folks,

This afternoon before the storm, I visited the Museum of Discovery in Ft 
Collins where around 70 redpolls continue. I saw one male Hoary Redpoll, and 
two other possible Hoaries in about an hour and a half. The variation between 
individual redpolls at the museum is really striking, and I couldn't help but 
compare them to the 5 subspecies of juncos present: while the redpolls 
represent 2 species (ostensibly;)), the juncos represent only one (again, 
ostensibly). However, most of the time (and I say most of the time because 
juncos can be funky, I saw some weird ones today) we have no problem 
identifying juncos to subspecies, but as COBirders have seen this year redpolls 
are quite difficult to separate to species. [Whether there are in fact two 
species is not apropos of this post:)] In any case, I had juncos and redpolls 
both that I could not/would not fully identify. Maybe I'm the only one who 
finds juncos interesting...Anyway, other interesting things at the museum were 
an Eastern White-breasted Nuthatch, a Wilson's Snipe, and a Sharpie that 
disrupted the redpoll show for about 20 minutes.

As with the Rosy-finches at Red Rocks, tomorrow would be a good day to study 
redpolls at the museum.

Cheers,

Dan Maynard
Boulder, CO
Sent from my iPhone

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