A possible explanation for the Mountain chickadees popping up all over in the 
flatlands: it is really dry in the mountains. At 7500 ft where I live near 
Drake there is no drinkable water for the birds other than what I put out each 
day (it soon freezes). Mountain chickadees are here in small numbers but I 
wonder about the absence of Pygmy nuthatches which have disappeared these last 
few weeks. So... maybe the birds are looking for water?

 Dave Hyde/nr Drake, CO at 7500'

________________________________
From: [email protected] <[email protected]> on behalf of Steven 
Brown <[email protected]>
Sent: Wednesday, January 3, 2018 11:20 AM
To: COBirds
Subject: [cobirds] Mountain Chickadee Musings

Hey COBirders,

I have been following the thread of MOCH’s being seen along the Front Range, 
and had a little to add about my yard.
As I posted earlier, I have been seeing all kinds of mountain birds in my yard 
the last two months, with good numbers and diversity I don’t usually get.

Over the 27 years we have lived in NW Colo Spgs, (in a residential 
neighborhood, not out in the woods), we have seen MOCH numbers increase, and 
become permanent yard residents.  Initially we only had a few around in the 
winter, but sometime in the '90’s they started hanging around all year, and now 
even nest in the yard some years.

That being said, I have banded about 40 in the yard over the last 6 years, 
mostly young, newly fledged ones. In recent years I have banded 9 in 2015, 8 in 
2016, 6 in the first 10 months of 2017.  But THIS is ridiculous. Since November 
1, 2017 I have banded 65 in my yard, 90% hatch-year birds. I seem to add 
another new one almost daily, and to re-capture several others banded earlier 
in the season.


Anecdotally, when we first came to town in 1980 MOCH’s were only really seen in 
the winter months, in small numbers, in large established conifers like in the 
old Victorian neighborhood North of Colorado College. As I said, now they are 
permanent residents on the West side of town, and seen daily.

Also a note on Pygmy Nuthatches. Previously I had only seen single birds, on 
three occasions in the yard, over 27 years. This year I am regularly seeing 
small flocks in the yard, the neighborhood, and around Mountain Shadows Park, 
in even small pines. I have banded 12 here so far this winter, three on 1/1/18. 
(they are pretty cute in the hand, but have REAL long, REAL sharp claws. That 
makes sense!)

Happy start to the Birding New Year,
Steve Brown
Colo Spgs

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