Birders,

After a one day absence, the female-type Purple Finch I reported from my Las Animas feeders on November 16th returned at 10:40 this morning. It is hanging around my neighborhood, and may be either ridiculously easy or impossible to relocate. Birders are welcome to try, provided I know in advance. Yesterday, while looking, I photographed a female Ladder-backed Woodpecker near my feeders, but it did not visit them, or my water feature. This species is rare but regular in the private canyon country in southern Bent County but very rare away from native junipers, cholla or scattered cottonwood trees along desert arroyos. It was the eighth woodpecker species I've had in my yard. I got to observe Ladder-backed and Red-bellied Woodpeckers at the same time from my window, surely a rare bird combo in Colorado.

We had hurricane force winds on November 17th, which caused quite a bit of damage, but brought no measurable precipitation. The story is apparently different north, south, east and west of here. The Purple Finch was regular during the wind event, but no one in their right mind would have braved the elements to get here.

I still have three Canyon Towhees and one Curve-billed Thrasher regularly in my yard.

Respectfully,

Duane Nelson
Las Animas, Bent County, CO

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