Hi COBirders,

The Birdcast Forecast was for “High” migration activity last night for our 
area. I can confirm that happened at Clear Spring Ranch. This was by far the 
most passerine movement seen this year, although that didn’t translate to birds 
in the net. 20 birds banded today.

Starting about 6:30 small flocks of same species birds started moving through 
the area, especially between 20 and 50’ up in the trees. This went on 
intermittently until about 8:00, and most netted birds occurred in this stretch 
as well. After 9:30 it was just about totally dead. Even the dozens of male 
Red-winged Blackbirds sitting on the high point of their territories were not 
to be seen.  (???) Also several Common Yellowthroat females WERE banded,  all 
arriving together, and the first females to date. And very obvious were 3-4  
flocks of Bullock’s Orioles, mostly adult males, a few banded, and an SY male 
Orchard Oriole, trying to look like some kind of huge Kentucky Warbler. It had 
just a few rusty feathers on its otherwise all yellow breast.

One flock at 7:00 had 10 Audubon’s Warblers, Wilson’s Warbler, 2 N Waterthrush, 
a couple of Yellow Warblers, and way up high in a cottonwood, a female 
Blackpoll Warbler. Most of these were seen with “warbler neck”, not in the 
nets.  Also passing through were 16 Blue Jays in a flock, a couple of FOY 
Western Tanager females together, a couple of Black-headed Grosbeak females 
together, a FOY Lazuli Bunting male, and a hybrid IndigoxLazuli adult male 
(photo below). These were definitely motivated in their movement North, not 
stopping, or only bouncing off a branch after a second or two. There was no 
feeding going on.  Maybe they know they are late!

So I saw lots of movement, in one direction, and mostly up high in the 
cottonwoods. But it was fun to actually SEE something for a change!  More 
anticipation for the weekend, as the migration is still rated “HIGH” for 
activity.

Happy Migration,
Steve Brown
Colo Spgs

Note: Any “brown or rust” color seen is the tips of blue feathers still to be 
worn off, not the bright colors of a breast band. Pretty Cool.
 

-- 
-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google
Groups "Colorado Birds" group.
To post to this group, send email to [email protected]
For more options, visit this group at
http://groups.google.com/group/cobirds?hl=en?hl=en
* All posts should be signed with the poster's full name and city. Include bird 
species and location in the subject line when appropriate
* Join Colorado Field Ornithologists https://cobirds.org/CFO/Membership/
--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Colorado Birds" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To view this discussion on the web visit 
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/cobirds/656FA813-3FA5-45C4-80A0-20B3AFC4B607%40gmail.com.

Reply via email to