COBirders,

Enjoying the mild fervor of hummingbird migration through Weld County this 
season.  At least a small handful of hummers I've detected over the last 
few weeks around Milliken/Johnstown.  Been out of town, and lazy at home, 
so late in the game to put up clean, full feeders in Milliken yard.  But 
sure enough, witnessed a hummingbird checking out the red things in the 
backyard this past weekend, near dusk, so immediately ran out and grabbed 
the two nectar feeders, quickly scrubbed and filled them, and as soon as I 
walk outside to hang the first one, a hummingbird zips in to within 5 feet 
or so.  Stood still enough and at close enough range to see that this bird 
was surely not a Selasphorus, but Archilocus. Spread tail totally lacking 
any rufous, structurally smaller-tailed than Broad-tailed and different 
from Selasphoros, different jizz.

Have had two nectar feeders up now for a few days, and thank goodness for 
the Scarlet Bugler (Penstamon barbatus) we planted this spring which is 
currently a tower of beautiful red tube type flowers.  At least a few 
different birds in backyard in the last few days, including a fem/imm 
Broad-tailed (photos), a male Selasphorus type (heard brief distant wing 
whistle zip by, not enough to tell Broad-tailed vs Rufous/Allen's type 
whistle), and this fem/imm Archilocus type (photos).

Not going to lie, when the dusk NON-Selasphorus bird zipped in and fed 5-10 
feet away last Saturday 18 Aug., it showed a few dark gorget feathers, 
bordered by a clean white down the sides and rear of gorget area, quite 
reminiscent of Costa's!  But seeing it once or twice again (briefly, I 
thiiiink it's the same bird as the dusk sighting), and with photos, I do 
not think it is Costa's. Thinking Black-chinned.

But what of the total dearth of Archilocus for Weld County on eBird???  
Until today when I reset the date range on ebird/Weld Co. charts, there was 
*not a single* July or August record of any Archilocus, or even a spring 
record! In fact before 3 days ago, Weld County ebird showed only ONE 
historical report of Archilocus.  Refreshed new end-date range from 2017 to 
2018 today, and see there is a new blip for BCHU - I think from J. 
Angstman's ebird submission from 3 days ago.   Clearly Weld County needs 
more hummingbird feeders up, and awareness.  Not going on a limb to say 
that Johnstown/Milliken folk generally are not even aware that hummingbirds 
exist out here, and according to eBird that goes for the whole county.  
"There aren't enough trees." etc.  But maybe people are starting to notice, 
partly in help to a new hummer feeder display at work, and some chit-chat 
and info-sharing with locals. Might have to pass out COBirds / eBird 
information for my hummingbird customers so they can contribute 
observations?

Still simply hard to believe there was not a single July or August ebird 
record of Archilocus for Weld until Angstman's submission three days ago.

Based on range, habitat, data, BCHU is more likely than RTHU in Weld 
County.  Mr. Dave Leatherman documents BCHU nesting in Grandview Cemetary 
in Fort Collins (Leatherman being one of the greatest assets to Colorado 
natural history observations in modern history).  This bird(s) in Milliken 
backyard could certainly be Ruby-throated, but until some sunlit gorget 
reflections or feather structure analysis say otherwise, Black-chinned is 
the guess.

Surely not nearly as rare as eBird would suggest, but at the same time the 
near total lack of ebird records of this genus from this county, keep those 
feeders full and clean and watched!

https://www.flickr.com/photos/26102738@N07/

BTW, any follow-ups on the Black Rails or King Rails at Lower Latham the 
last several weeks? Haven't been out, but also haven't seen any reports. 
Would be cool to get pics of BLRA or KIRA fledglings for northern CO.

Good birding,

Derek Hill
Milliken, CO
[email protected]
[email protected]

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