COBirders--  With great trepidation, after the excitement related to Mark
Peterson's great sandpiper find, I am posting my sighting of a Blue Jay at
our cabin at 9200 ft. in the Sangre de Cristo range. The Checklist for Birds
of the Wet Mountain Valley by the Arkansas Valley Audubon Society shows that
this species is rare in all seasons in Custer County. The Wet Mountain
Valley is nestled between the Wet Mountains on the east and the higher
Sangre de Cristo mountains on the west. During the 50+ years we have used
our cabin weekly in the six warmer months, last Monday was the first time we
have seen a Blue Jay there. I'm of the opinion that its "rare"
classification is probably due to sightings in the Wet Mountains. I'm
wondering if the sightings of Blue Jay further west (i.e. Salida) have been
at lower elevations. 

   A bit of info for our less experienced Cobirds users:  The Steller's Jay
is the native dark blue jay of Colorado's mountains while the Blue Jay has
slowly extended its range from the east to Colorado only in the last 60
years or so. [Any comments on this issue by CFO's experts are welcome.]

Leon Bright, Pueblo and Custer County

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