COBirders,
An astute weather-watcher asked what it was going to look like for birds
with the next system coming in. They were ahead of my thinking for sure
(darn work getting in the way of fun).

*5/1 SE CO will see a connection from the Yucatan*
https://earth.nullschool.net/#2022/05/01/1200Z/wind/isobaric/850hPa/orthographic=-100.03,32.69,1951/loc=-103.708,37.700
(Green
circle is south of La Junta)

That map is quite telling of all of the overnight hours tonight.  That
pattern doesn't look much different if you spend some time flipping through
the times available on the wind maps from sundown tonight to sun-up
tomorrow.  So this is a long duration convergence pattern which is a GREAT
thing for SE CO.  Anywhere from Pueblo to Lamar (better towards Lamar than
Pueblo) could see some great movements into the area overnight.  I also
don't expect anything to leave the area from previous days, so we could see
a large diversity of birds (even higher than already going on).  For the
rest of CO tomorrow (Sunday), there won't be much movement of passerines
overnight.  Expect though that this will change throughout the day on
Sunday.  The connection from the Yucatan actually opens up throughout the
day tomorrow and the northern Front Range gets in on the action!

*5/2 Northern Front Range gets connected to the Yucatan*
https://earth.nullschool.net/#2022/05/02/1200Z/wind/isobaric/850hPa/orthographic=-98.23,34.96,1951/loc=-105.120,40.191
(Green
circle in Longmont for reference)

I expect that the northern Front Range will be the target on Monday after
SE CO's good chances.  The problem with Monday is the chance of rain
throughout the area.  This will make the birding maybe a bit more hit or
miss location-wise.  But that won't likely matter too much because the
birds WILL be on the move.  It may just be hard to guess the exact location
of the best birding Monday morning due to the possible rain.  But, get out
there and find the best spots and let everyone else know.  We'll be
watching.

Now, this actually brings up another point.  With the chance of rain, this
will mean the cloud cover will be lower, so overnight migrant listening
might be really good for CO standards.  Low cloud cover drives the birds to
be lower towards the ground, making calls easier to hear, and with the
winds coming from the Yucatan, we have a good chance of getting some good
night flight calls as long as it isn't raining where you are.

And finally, if you haven't believed me for all these years, or you need
more supporting information, you can check out birdcast's new "Migration
Dashboard" for every county and state in the US.
https://birdcast.info/migration-tools/migration-dashboard/. This brand new
website shows you estimated numbers of birds from real-time radar data over
your county or state of choice.  Enter your county or state into the text
field and press "Search".  This will take you to a page where you can
monitor the radar-estimated bird counts over your area.  There is a nice
archive to dig through as well to see how migration has been playing out
recently compared to historical numbers.  This page has been quite
instructive over the past couple weeks since it went live.  If you want to
see more about the dashboard you can check out the recorded webcast about
the new dashboard here:
https://academy.allaboutbirds.org/live-event/the-birdcast-dashboard-live-radar-tracking-of-bird-migration-in-your-county-and-state/

May the winds be ever in your (and the birds') favor.
Bryan

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