Sorry for the slow reporting...on Jan 20 I took a mountain vista drive
through Park County with my family, birding mostly incidentally along Hwys
24 and 285. I did not look at any of the reservoirs, which I imagine were
all frozen.

At South Park I spotted 5 ROUGH-LEGGED HAWKS in 4 locations. NORTHERN
SHRIKES were at Divide and Hartzel. Single CLARK'S NUTCRACKERS were at
Wilkerson Pass and Kenosha Pass. A pond near the parking area for 63 Ranch
SWA was surprsingly ice-free and had 9 species of ducks, with a pair of
HOODED MERGANSERS perhaps being of the most interest (at least the count
was flagged on my eBird checklist as a "high count"). An AMERICAN DIPPER
was at some open patches of the mostly iced-topped South Platte near Grant.

Around St. Mary of the Rockies Church at Crow Hill (or is the community
Deer Creek?), off Hwy 285 there was a juv. NORTHERN GOSHAWK, a NORTHERN
PYGMY-OWL, and a flight of 347 AMERICAN CROWS moving from the Denver
direction toward a roost further upslope even from where I was viewing.
I've been observing some similar movements to/from roosts in the higher
mountains by birds commuting from mountain roosts to the Metro Area. Why
are they apparently roosting up high?

David Suddjian
Littleton

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