This thread caught my eye.  I saw huge flock out north of DIA and noticed 
the same thing after looking a photos.  Only a few males mixed in as far as 
I can tell.
See high resolution photo...  https://flic.kr/p/2kntCXj

On Wednesday, December 30, 2020 at 12:56:13 PM UTC-7 [email protected] wrote:

> Hi All,
>
> I'm out here in the Bay Area, CA but this topic recently surfaced with 
> regards to observers noting that Red-winged Blackbirds appear in single-sex 
> flocks near the coast in winter. Alvaro Jaramillo, who literally wrote the 
> book on New World Blackbirds (*icterids*), noted the following.
>
> *Often they are in all female flocks around here, and only in winter. The 
> males are not as common on the coast as the females, but they are frequent 
> in the Central Valley in winter. Again, they segregate in winter into 
> single sex flocks.* 
>
> When asked if Tricolored Blackbirds segregate into single sex flocks, this 
> was Alvaro's response:
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> *It is a classic Red-winged behavior, it seems to me that 
> Tricoloredblackbirds are mixed but in general I see a preponderance of 
> males on thecoast. Yellow-headed Blackbirds also segregate, it would be 
> interesting tosee what Great-tailed Grackles do in areas where they are 
> common. The reasonis that sexual size dimorphism may be one of the factors 
> in sex segregatedflocks. Certainly oropendolas in the Neotropics segregate 
> during thenon-breeding season, and they have the largest size dimorphism of 
> any bird.Great-tailed grackles are not too far behind.*
>
> I hope this info is of interest.
>
> Regards,
>
> Derek Lecy
> San Rafael, CA (but born and raised in Boulder)
> On Tuesday, December 29, 2020 at 11:43:49 AM UTC-8 [email protected] 
> wrote:
>
>> All males here as well,  both along the South Platte in Denver and on the 
>> Barr Lake CBC.  Definitely a mix of young and adult plumaged birds.  And 
>> try as I might none of them could be converted to Rusty's.
>>
>> Charlie Chase
>> Denver
>>
>>
>>
>> On Tue, Dec 29, 2020 at 11:12 AM W. Robert Shade III <[email protected]> 
>> wrote:
>>
>>> I have as many as 50 or more Red-winged Blackbirds swarming my feeders 
>>> every morning. Why are they all females? Males do not look like females in 
>>> winter do they? This means they must spend the winter in different places. 
>>> If so, what is the rationale for that? I cannot think of any other species 
>>> that segregates by gender in winter. 
>>>
>>> Bob Shade
>>> Green Mountain
>>> Lakewood
>>>
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