The Sandhill Crane migration is in full swing in the San Luis  Valley.  I 
was there during the official festival weekend and saw the  expected 
thousands of feeding, loafing and flying cranes, geese and ducks.   Always an 
amazing spectacle.
   Four unexpected sightings were:
- Seeing a dozen Bald Eagles congregate into a thermal just north of  Home 
Lake late Friday morning, ride the air up and head north.
- A very leucistic Red-tailed Hawk hanging around near the intersection of  
Roads 8S & 5E, reported by others later as being harassed by a  
Rough-legged Hawk.  The bird had a few random dark feathers and an orangey  
bill.  A 
friend got pictures that I'll share with anyone who's  interested.
- A lone Tundra Swan seen Friday evening in the ponds along Colo 15 just  
south of the old Refuge HQ, seen again flying the next morning.
- An extended flow of cranes from the south Sunday morning, apparently  
they'd flown up overnight from the Bosque del Apache region.  Line after  line 
(do we call them skeins when they're cranes?) of birds appearing as  dust 
flecks in binoculars trained on San Antonio Mountain, a new line appearing  
every few seconds for the two hours I watched, getting closer and closer  till 
visible with the naked eye.  I've seen the feeding flocks  and flyouts many 
times over the years, but this is the first time I've  experienced a 
massive influx of cranes migrating up from the south.  It was  something to 
behold.
 
Keep Smilin',
Kevin Corwin
 
Sent from my  Remington Rand Typewriter via my Wall Phone

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