Went out for a little bit at 10pm to see what I might hear since there is a low 
cloud deck (pretty hard to come by in CO overnight this time of year) and the 
low-level winds are out of the "northish" direction.  The scattered showers are 
making things a little more concentrated I am guessing.  You can see areas on 
the radar imagery tonight where the precipitation is traveling northward, while 
there are "non-precipitation" echoes that are traveling another direction 
around the same ring of the radar.  This is a pretty good indication of 
biological targets (birds, bats, insects, or other).  

Went out and heard 14 passerine sp. (seeps, tseeps, sweeps, zeeps), 4 Chipping 
Sparrows, and 1 Swainson's Thrush in 15 minutes of listening.  Not bad.  If you 
are able, go out some time tonight and listen from a quiet area.  With the 
low-level clouds, it makes it a lot easier to hear things as the sound reflects 
off the clouds and the birds will be lower anyway instead of flying through the 
clouds.  
 
Bryan Guarente
Meteorologist/Instructional Designer
The COMET Program
University Corporation for Atmospheric Research
Boulder, CO 

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