COBIrders,
*TL;DR (Too long; didn't read):* I don't know why the Hudsonian Godwits
showed up today in Boulder County, but I wanted to let you know some things
about numerical weather models that make them not always the best way to
answer the bird migration question I often pose on COBIRDS.  There is more
to weather forecasting than just what the model data says.

*Full story:*
Eric DeFonso spread the word this morning that there were 15 Hudsonian
Godwits seen at Lagerman Reservoir SW of Longmont in Boulder County, CO.
 I was surprised to hear this as yesterday's frontal passage wasn't
remarkable for driving birds into the Front Range.  Here is the pattern for
the same time that Eric reported these birds on eBird.

https://earth.nullschool.net/#2021/05/03/1500Z/wind/isobaric/850hPa/orthographic=-102.64,34.64,2728/loc=-105.187,40.138
(Green
circle is the location of Lagerman Reservoir)

Seems like quite the wrong pattern for birds to be coming into CO... hmm.

So maybe we need to look late yesterday (sunset on May 2nd) to see what it
looked like then:
https://earth.nullschool.net/#2021/05/03/0200Z/wind/isobaric/850hPa/orthographic=-102.64,34.64,2728/loc=-105.187,40.138
(Same
green circle on Lagerman Reservoir)

No better and you can see the cold front more clearly from Iowa through
Nebraska and into Kansas (blue squiggle of convergent winds on this
image).  Again, it doesn't look like a good time for birds to be coming to
CO as the winds are from the north making most birds want to stop their
journey rather than face the north winds.

Let's keep going backwards  in time though.  Here is 12pm May 2nd.  I am
choosing this time for a reason that will become clearer later.
https://earth.nullschool.net/#2021/05/02/1800Z/wind/isobaric/850hPa/orthographic=-102.64,34.64,2728/loc=-105.187,40.138
(Same
green circle)

Still in that same boat... not good migration conditions into CO.  This was
the last observation time as well from a birder on eBird at Lagerman
yesterday... leaving a large window of opportunity for these birds to come
to Lagerman and go undetected until this morning.

But this is where the story goes off course from my normal posts to
COBirds.  The website data is from a computer model.  Computer models are
right in many ways and I love their output for posts like the ones I
normally make.  One of the ways that meteorologists are still important is
that we can sometimes tell when the model data needs some nudging to make a
good public forecast.  Or we can use the observations in hindsight to
compare to the models and we can see when something was missing.  This is
one of the latter cases.

Let's look at a variable that I don't normally ask you to look at: 3-hour
precipitation accumulation.  This is how much rain or snow accumulated over
the last three hours from the time of the plot.  So at the following map
time, the data show precipitation from 9am until 12pm.

https://earth.nullschool.net/#2021/05/02/1800Z/wind/isobaric/850hPa/overlay=precip_3hr/orthographic=-102.64,34.64,2728/loc=-105.187,40.138
(Same
green circle)

The amount of rain near Lagerman Reservoir was expected to be .06 inches.
This is light rain for a bit.  Nothing much.  In reality, let's see what
was happening:
https://climate.cod.edu/data/nexrad/FTG/N0Q/FTG.N0Q.20210502.1653.gif.

This is a pretty strong line of thunderstorms moving from west to east that
was barreling down the foothills to change the local smaller scale weather
pattern compared to the model output.  This wasn't going to be a little bit
of rain for a bit.  This was a thunderstorm that was meaning business for
those in the way of it.  That radar image was a few minutes after Boulder
Municipal Airport had received .9 inches of precipitation in the last *hour*
.

This is a major departure from what the model was saying!  This model
wasn't expecting a thunderstorm like we ended up receiving.  This means
that some of the local winds (at the surface and aloft) are likely
different by a large amount compared to the model output.  This could have
led to a situation where the Hudsonian Godwits found a different pathway
through the meteorological pattern that we just aren't seeing in the model
data.  I don't know for sure how the Godwits got here, but I am speculating
that this thunderstorm and its resulting change in the wind pattern as it
moved off of the foothills and out into the eastern plains of CO caused a
nice migration pathway to help them find Lagerman Reservoir.

Now, since you have read this far, I have to give you something else to
work with.  I believe the Hudsonian Godwits have a chance of sticking
around through the night if you didn't get your chance today.  Here is
tomorrow morning (7am May 4th):
https://earth.nullschool.net/#2021/05/04/1300Z/wind/isobaric/850hPa/orthographic=-102.64,34.64,2728/loc=-105.187,40.138
.

This is the first solid south wind for these birds to leave on.  So if you
get to Lagerman at around sun-up, you have a chance of seeing these birds
in the morning.  They may not last long after that though as the winds pick
up and give a nice south wind for these birds to migrate on.

So when is the next chance of anything in CO?  It looks like May 5th there
is a small push of migrants in the southeast.  I would suggest a rectangle
from Cheyenne Wells south to Lamar,  west to John Martin Reservoir, and
north to Kit Carson.

https://earth.nullschool.net/#2021/05/05/1200Z/wind/isobaric/850hPa/orthographic=-102.64,34.64,2728/loc=-102.370,38.802
(Green circle is Cheyenne Wells, CO)

Hope you enjoyed this and get a chance to see the Hudsonian Godwits like
the 76 observers who reported to eBird today from Lagerman Reservoir
(compare that to three the day before).

And lastly, if you are thinking ahead to the weekend and the CO Birding
Challenge, check out the first look at Saturday's forecast winds:
https://earth.nullschool.net/#2021/05/08/1800Z/wind/isobaric/850hPa/orthographic=-104.64,39.77,5329

Any guesses where the best location to go birding will be?

Ask questions, be curious, and keep the reports coming.  Migration and
weather are slowly unravelling this year's mysteries of movement.

Rambling email concluded.

See ya in the field,
Bryan

Bryan Guarente
Meteorologist/Instructional Designer
UCAR/The COMET Program
Boulder, CO

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