Thought I would follow up and bring you up to date on some of the summer 
highlites here in the San Luis Valley 

First of all, we had pretty good spring and early summer moisture patterns. 
The snowpack was at or slightly above average. The snowpack combined with 
plentiful early rainfall made for excellent growing conditions for grasses 
and forbs. There seemed to be water everywhere and our spring report of 
exceptional numbers of migrating shorebirds attested to that fact. With 
saturated soil conditions, the resulting lush vegetative response seemed to 
bring about some bird occurrences that may be linked to the vegetative 
conditions. 

The first unusual summer bird was Dickcissel. There were not one but three 
individuals reported, two by Stump near Alamosa and one other at the MVNWR 
(ebird). Our local records had only one individual...a single bird found by 
Hugh and Urling Kingery during the first Atlas surveys decades ago. The 
next amazing bird was an apparent Eastern Meadowlark near Del Norte 
(pending review). This represents the first San Luis Valley record for the 
species and included video. These two species prefer tall grasslands and 
weedy habitats.  

We will be watching for Dickcissel and E Meadowlarks in the coming years, 
but more often than not, such irruptions of similar species like 
Grasshopper Sparrow and Cassin's Sparrows in the Valley have proven to be 
one-hit wonders. I think the SLV influx was a weather-related, one-time 
event but we will keep watching as always ....

John Rawinski
Monte Vista, CO


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