I'll start with these two:

10. *Vaux's swift,* April 28, 2015, Pueblo Reservoir. There had been 
several suggestive reports previously, and the species may even be rare but 
regular in very small numbers in Colorado. But this one, found by Brandon 
Percival, was photographed, eBirded, and, I assume, submitted to the 
Colorado Bird Records Committee. It is the strongest evidence yet for the 
occurrence in Colorado of the species.

9. *White-throated swifts* well into December in the Arkansas River valley. 
One-off rarities are cool, but full-on phenomena are, for my money, 
especially compelling. As Duane Nelson, Brandon Percival, and others have 
noted, it will be fascinating to see how this all plays out--in the months 
to come, and in the years ahead.

Alright, 8 more!

Ted Floyd
Lafayette, Boulder County




On Monday, December 28, 2015 at 11:01:18 AM UTC-7, The "Nunn Guy" wrote:
>
> Hi all
> In this the week of lists thought I'd ask that question ... perhaps along 
> with IDing the top 10 2015 Colorado rare birds share the stories and 
> meaning of the find.
> Thanks
> Gary Lefko, Nunn
> http://coloradobirder.ning.com/
> Mobile:  http://coloradobirder.ning.com/m
>
>

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