To piggyback on Paul's suggestion....I've been doing survey transects for
RMBO down in the SW corner of the state since mid-May, and having many
occasions to bird in the mid-elevation ponderosa pine forests (and pine-oak
woodlands) in Montrose, Montezuma, and La Plata counties, as well as in SE
Utah in the Abajo Mountains. I've never been to these places before so I
don't exactly have a baseline for comparison, but I've been amazed at how
these forests seem to be absolutely brimming with Grace's Warblers. In a
couple of these locations they are easily the predominant warbler. In light
of the recent sightings of Grace's on the eastern slope, I wonder now if
they're here just because it's been a banner year for the bird in general
and some individuals are, at least this season, striking out further east
and north than usual to find available habitat and territories. Just
thinking out loud...maybe it's like that every year?

Eric


On Tue, Jun 10, 2014 at 12:12 PM, Paul Hurtado <[email protected]>
wrote:

> This is a late report, but one was observed in the Pueblo Mountain Park
> (just south of Beaulah) last week on the 4th:
>
> http://ebird.org/ebird/view/checklist?subID=S18717190
>
> So there are at least TWO along the eastern edge of the mountains right
> now.
>
> If you live near pondarosa pine forests -- especially with some scrub oak
> / gambel oak in the understory -- then definitely familiarize yourself with
> these birds and their vocalizations!
>
> There could very well be more than two lurking in the foothills of the
> Front Range, Wets and southern Sangres. :-)
>
>

-- 
Eric DeFonso
Boulder, CO

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