Kudos to Lori Z. in Fort Collins for finding a very late Northern Waterthrush 
along the Poudre which was warbler species #19 on my draft list for CO since 
November 1, 2022.  Brandon and Tyler have added Cape May and American Redstart, 
respectively, for a total so far of 21.  People fluent in eBird archives can 
probably find a palm record for CO since November 1 and I seem to recall a 
bay-breasted in nw CO (or was that October?).

Whatever the total is, it's almost as good as what we get during the supposed 
"primetimes" of late May and September.  And I'd love to know the reason for 
the late flush of these individuals that "didn't get the memo" about when it's 
best to migrate.  Are they mostly first-time migrants (i.e. young born last 
summer) from late-starting first or second nests?  Are they just not wired 
correctly?  Are the late adults we see individuals that didn't nest at all, or 
that had failed nests, late nests, or what?  I was sent a NYT article that 
makes the case for various species of forest rodents that feed on forest tree 
seeds in Maine having different personalities.  Why not birds?  Are some birds 
simply procrastinators?  Are more late migrants these days surviving than would 
have been the case "in the old days" because current late autumn weather tends 
to be milder?  Do they pass on this timing to their offspring next summer?  Is 
a proliferation of urban plantings that support the kind of foods needed to 
pull off a late migration part of it?  Maybe it just seems like there are more 
late migrants because more of us are looking than used to be the case (see 
David Suddjian's recent graphs of increasing eBird checklists).  Lots of 
questions begging answers.

Dave Leatherman
Fort Collins

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