A juvenile Red-necked Grebe was at Horseshoe Lake (northeast Loveland) this 
afternoon, presumably the same one reported on 1 Nov by Andy Bankert. Common 
Goldeneye were present (FOS for me), 2 Red-breasted Mergansers and several 
Bonaparte's Gulls. Complete checklist can be viewed on ebird here: 
http://ebird.org/ebird/view/checklist?subID=S20495019 . Also of interest was a 
gull I could not identify. My best guess is a hybrid Mew Gull x Black-legged 
Kittiwake. Unfortunately, no photos were obtained. Anyone looking at gulls this 
fall should keep their eyes open for this oddity. For those interested, here is 
a description: 
An adult gull superficially similar to nearby Ring-billed Gulls, but slightly 
smaller, like a Mew Gull. White head and underparts. Mantle (back and wings) 
was gray, but a shade darker than Ring-billed Gull, like Mew Gull. When 
floating on the water, the gray mantle was separated from black primary tips by 
a thick white tertial crescent - much thicker than that of Ring-billed Gull, 
again like Mew Gull. Head small, white and rounded, like Mew Gull except that 
it lacked any noticeable streaking or smudging. It also lacked any obvious 
dusky spot or mark in the auricular area that would be typical of black-headed 
gulls or kittiwakes. However, it had a light gray patch on the nape, similar to 
that of Bonaparte's Gull or Laughing Gull, and suggestive of winter plumage 
Black-legged Kittiwake. The bill was small, but due to great distance, I can't 
say too much about the bill size relative to the accompanying Ring-billed Gulls 
or about the color of the bill, except that it seemed to be mostly or all dark, 
suggestive of young kittiwake or any age Laughing Gull. When it flew off 
towards Boyd Lake (probably roosting there at night), I noticed a white 
trailing edge of the wing (i.e. white tips to the secondaries), uniform gray on 
mantle, fairly limited black on wingtips (more like Mew than either Ring-billed 
or kittiwake) with two small white mirrors on the outer two primaries (smaller 
than expected for Mew, more like Ring-billed). One last comment: when it was 
floating on the water, it was picking food items off the surface (as were the 
Ring-billed Gulls) and its movements were much more rapid than the Ring-billed 
Gulls, both with up and down head movements, and with body twists from side to 
side, giving the impression of a smaller "black-headed" gull like Bonaparte's 
or Sabine's, or like a kittiwake. 
  
So, I could not put a species name on this small white-headed gull. Area 
birders should keep their eyes open for this at Loveland-area gull hangouts 
like Larimer County landfill, Boyd Lake, Lake Loveland, Equalizer Lake, Fossil 
Creek Reservoir, and of course Horseshoe Lake. And all points south. 
  
Nick Komar 
Fort Collins CO 

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