COBirders,
I have been monitoring the winds since before the Mother's Day Weekend
snowstorm on the web.  It has been a great example of how to "stop"
migration.  The snowstorm trucked through Colorado with the low pressure
center around the La Junta (approximated) then headed northeast.  After
that system swept through, the following pattern existed for the last
approximately 6 days.  It just kept digging farther south until the front
crossed the Gulf of Mexico.

http://earth.nullschool.net/#2014/05/11/1800Z/wind/isobaric/850hPa/orthographic=-105.12,40.19,1704

Currently this image is centered on Longmont, CO (where I live).  To get
your location to show up highlighted on the map, click the "Earth" button
in the bottom right, then click on the "[(O)]" button (fifth line down from
the top, sixth button on that line).  That should help you orient yourself.
 If you need to zoom in or out, you can also do that with the scroll wheel
of your mouse (if you have one).  It might help for context to zoom out
sometimes.

Notice the winds are butted right up against the Front Range.  There is a
small section of air that would be able to squeeze right up the Front Range
to about... wait for it... Chatfield Reservoir.  Imagine that... there were
many reports of fallout.  I am not looking to have a discussion of fallout
and its many definitions, but would like to believe from the reports that
there were TONS of birds.  So whatever your definition of fallout, it would
have been fun to get to Chatfield during and after this storm.

But what happened the next few days.  There likely wasn't much large-scale
bird movement.  Watch the winds just slam down on Colorado from the north
for a while.

Noon on the 12th:
http://earth.nullschool.net/#2014/05/12/1800Z/wind/isobaric/850hPa/orthographic=-105.12,40.19,1704

Noon on the 13th:
http://earth.nullschool.net/#2014/05/13/1800Z/wind/isobaric/850hPa/orthographic=-105.12,40.19,1704

Noon on the 14th:
http://earth.nullschool.net/#2014/05/14/1800Z/wind/isobaric/850hPa/orthographic=-105.12,40.19,1704

and it just continued, until tonight (05/17/2014):
http://earth.nullschool.net/#2014/05/18/0300Z/wind/isobaric/850hPa/orthographic=-105.12,40.19,1704

That image is for 9pm tonight.  Where are all the winds pointing?  Directly
at the migration mecca (at least this year) of Colorado's Front Range.
 Don't believe these crazy maps from some random guy on CoBirds?  Try this
on for size:
http://weather.cod.edu/satrad/nexrad/index.php?type=FTG-N0Q-1-48

If you catch this image before it gets too late, there will be a nice set
of thunderstorms coming down off the Cheyenne Ridge (Cheyenne, WY), then
those break up and a few hours later the radar lights UP!  See the big ring
of green radar echoes?  Those are likely bugs, bats, and birds.  So get out
there and start listening.  The place to be right now is Colorado!

Unfortunately in the morning, We won't be so lucky though.  The pattern is
supposed to change to a more southerly flow throughout the night and most
of the migration won't get concentrated in Colorado (no fronts or
boundaries to stop bird migration).  Here's 6am tomorrow morning (5/18):
http://earth.nullschool.net/#2014/05/18/1200Z/wind/isobaric/850hPa/orthographic=-105.12,40.19,1704

I am going to go sit outside and count night flight calls with a glass of
wine in a minute.  Hoping to snag a few thrushes, maybe a sandpiper or two,
and hopefully plenty of unknown bird calls.  Let me know if you go out and
listen and how it plays out.  Birds might be high up because there isn't
low clouds, but still might get high concentrations since the winds haven't
been great for northward migration recently.  There might be some low
enough to hear.  Good luck to you and happy birding.

Bryan Guarente
Instructional Designer/Meteorologist
UCAR/The COMET Program
Boulder, CO

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