On Monday, February 24, 2014 10:51:08 AM UTC-7, Mark Minner-lee wrote:
>
>
> Despite its' apparent domestication it was still a great bird to watch- 
>

I completely agree with this sentiment.

A few years ago, a Chukar visited Greenlee Preserve, Boulder County, and it 
delighted a great throng of people, not just birders.

It's good to keep in mind that so many of our birds receive human 
assistance of one sort or another. Those gulls we love to watch?--Where 
would they be without landfills, fast food restaurant parking lots, and 
deepwater reservoirs in the Front Range metro region? Or how about the 
geese we love to ponder?--Their numbers are exploding in large part because 
of changing agricultural practices in the United States. Hummingbirds at 
feeders?--Love 'em, but they get by with a little help from their (human) 
friends. The Merlins at City Park in Denver?--They eat the House Sparrows 
that eat Malayan tapir manure in the Denver Zoo, and that's fine with me. 
And even the wildest seeming of vagrants, we're increasingly coming to 
appreciate, are the "beneficiaries" of anthropogenic climate change, e.g., 
Northern Fulmars getting to the eastern Pacific "thanks" to melting sea ice 
in the Arctic Ocean.

I'm cool with all those birds. I especially admire the Chukar for being a 
plucky survivor, for being beloved by the birding community in Broomfield 
and beyond, and for its inarguable beauty.

Ted Floyd

Lafayette, Boulder County, Colorado






 

>
> Regards, 
>
> Mark Minner-Lee 
>
> Sent from my iPad 
>
> > On Feb 24, 2014, at 10:36 AM, scott <[email protected] <javascript:>> 
> wrote: 
> > 
> > Looking at Mark Minner-Lee's photos of the Chuker makes me think it is a 
> escaped bird. In my opinion the feathers of that bird are way too 
> disheveled to be a wild bird. 
> > 
> > As we all know, winter birds need their feathers to be as perfect as 
> possible to keep them warm and dry throughout the cold winter. 
> > 
> > Just a thought, 
> > Scott Rashid 
> > 
> > 
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