Friday, 10 July 2026

[cobirds] Separating F Black-chinned from Broad-tailed Hummingbird

This morning while birding the Lair-of-Bear Park a female hummingbird was darting back and forth across a small creek. The two expected hummers for the region would be the Black-chinned and the Broad-tailed. Given the hummers constant motion it seemed impossible to determine if the bill’s length, was long or short, nor if the back color was emerald green toned or dullish, gray green  suggestive for a Black-chinned. From the occasional views of it flicking its tail showed small white spots on each side of the tail, although at times hard to determine. In contrast the tail of the Broad-tailed does have a broad tail its white spots at the corner of its tail are more distinctive. Thus by this definition the humming bird I was looking at was a Black-chinned ??


Anyone else have tips on separating female  Black-chinned from  Broad-tailed.


Bob Righter

Denver, Colorado 

[cobirds] In theaters now...since it IS July...

The Broad-tails: evicted. The Black-chinned: in hiding. And a 3-gram flaming overlord is currently guarding the feeder like it’s the last drop of nectar on Earth.

Yesterday, a world of busy Broad-tails and peaceful Black-chinneds... today, one tiny copper menace shatters the peace. They weigh less than a nickel, but they have maximum sass. This July, the sugar water runs red (or, actually, dye-free clear).

Coming to a Colorado backyard near you: THE RUFOUS-ING. Rated R for Ruf-housing.--

Kristi Streiffert
about.me/krististreiffert

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Thursday, 9 July 2026

Re: [cobirds] Turkey nesting and families...

Two days ago I saw a turkey family along the Coal Creek trail:  two parents and 6 tiny chicks (about the size of a pickleball)! Could this be a second brood?

Paula Hansley
Louisville 




On Thu, Jul 9, 2026 at 10:51 AM linda hodges <hikerhodges@gmail.com> wrote:
Oh my gosh, Nic. What a great story! You are a hero for picking up that chick when mom wasn't even willing to roll it over. You'd make a good mother hen. 

Linda Hodges
Conservation Chair
Aiken Audubon




On Wed, Jul 8, 2026 at 8:51 PM nic korte <nkorte1@hotmail.com> wrote:
On June 27, NE of Collbran at about 7000 ft I encountered a hen turkey and eleven chicks.  The chicks were about the size of feral pigeons in height.  I suspect these chicks had to have been at least two weeks old, meaning hatching would have been about June 14.  This was a rural road and they fluttered across.   

Today, July 8, about 10 miles away and at approximately the same elevation, I encountered another hen turkey and chicks standing on the side of a well-traveled paved road.  If you have picked up a wild turkey egg, then you can visualize the size of these chicks.  Hatching must have been yesterday if not early this morning.   Thus, it was interesting to observe at least a three-week range in hatching. 

I stopped the car about five feet from the hen. She ran across the road as the tiny chicks followed.  One did not make it.  It was lying in the middle of the road flopping about as most of you have seen when a creature has been hit by a car.  I watched. The hen ran back, stuck its beak within a few inches of the chick as if to sniff it, then whirled and ran back to the rest of her brood.  Obviously, she had made the calculation that endangering herself in the middle of a paved road to save one chick with seven safely waiting for her was a bad plan.  She began ushering them up a small embankment.  I suspected the chick had stumbled and rolled onto its back and simply did not have the physical competence to right itself.  I ran out and scooped it into my cap and took it to the roadside.  Part of the reason it could not flip over is that it was so fat!   It raced up the hill and caught up with its family.  

Nic Korte, Grand Junction
  

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Re: [cobirds] Turkey nesting and families...

I agree with Linda!

On Thu, Jul 9, 2026 at 10:51 AM linda hodges <hikerhodges@gmail.com> wrote:
Oh my gosh, Nic. What a great story! You are a hero for picking up that chick when mom wasn't even willing to roll it over. You'd make a good mother hen. 

Linda Hodges
Conservation Chair
Aiken Audubon




On Wed, Jul 8, 2026 at 8:51 PM nic korte <nkorte1@hotmail.com> wrote:
On June 27, NE of Collbran at about 7000 ft I encountered a hen turkey and eleven chicks.  The chicks were about the size of feral pigeons in height.  I suspect these chicks had to have been at least two weeks old, meaning hatching would have been about June 14.  This was a rural road and they fluttered across.   

Today, July 8, about 10 miles away and at approximately the same elevation, I encountered another hen turkey and chicks standing on the side of a well-traveled paved road.  If you have picked up a wild turkey egg, then you can visualize the size of these chicks.  Hatching must have been yesterday if not early this morning.   Thus, it was interesting to observe at least a three-week range in hatching. 

I stopped the car about five feet from the hen. She ran across the road as the tiny chicks followed.  One did not make it.  It was lying in the middle of the road flopping about as most of you have seen when a creature has been hit by a car.  I watched. The hen ran back, stuck its beak within a few inches of the chick as if to sniff it, then whirled and ran back to the rest of her brood.  Obviously, she had made the calculation that endangering herself in the middle of a paved road to save one chick with seven safely waiting for her was a bad plan.  She began ushering them up a small embankment.  I suspected the chick had stumbled and rolled onto its back and simply did not have the physical competence to right itself.  I ran out and scooped it into my cap and took it to the roadside.  Part of the reason it could not flip over is that it was so fat!   It raced up the hill and caught up with its family.  

Nic Korte, Grand Junction
  

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Re: [cobirds] Turkey nesting and families...

Oh my gosh, Nic. What a great story! You are a hero for picking up that chick when mom wasn't even willing to roll it over. You'd make a good mother hen. 

Linda Hodges
Conservation Chair
Aiken Audubon




On Wed, Jul 8, 2026 at 8:51 PM nic korte <nkorte1@hotmail.com> wrote:
On June 27, NE of Collbran at about 7000 ft I encountered a hen turkey and eleven chicks.  The chicks were about the size of feral pigeons in height.  I suspect these chicks had to have been at least two weeks old, meaning hatching would have been about June 14.  This was a rural road and they fluttered across.   

Today, July 8, about 10 miles away and at approximately the same elevation, I encountered another hen turkey and chicks standing on the side of a well-traveled paved road.  If you have picked up a wild turkey egg, then you can visualize the size of these chicks.  Hatching must have been yesterday if not early this morning.   Thus, it was interesting to observe at least a three-week range in hatching. 

I stopped the car about five feet from the hen. She ran across the road as the tiny chicks followed.  One did not make it.  It was lying in the middle of the road flopping about as most of you have seen when a creature has been hit by a car.  I watched. The hen ran back, stuck its beak within a few inches of the chick as if to sniff it, then whirled and ran back to the rest of her brood.  Obviously, she had made the calculation that endangering herself in the middle of a paved road to save one chick with seven safely waiting for her was a bad plan.  She began ushering them up a small embankment.  I suspected the chick had stumbled and rolled onto its back and simply did not have the physical competence to right itself.  I ran out and scooped it into my cap and took it to the roadside.  Part of the reason it could not flip over is that it was so fat!   It raced up the hill and caught up with its family.  

Nic Korte, Grand Junction
  

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Wednesday, 8 July 2026

[cobirds] Turkey nesting and families...

On June 27, NE of Collbran at about 7000 ft I encountered a hen turkey and eleven chicks.  The chicks were about the size of feral pigeons in height.  I suspect these chicks had to have been at least two weeks old, meaning hatching would have been about June 14.  This was a rural road and they fluttered across.   

Today, July 8, about 10 miles away and at approximately the same elevation, I encountered another hen turkey and chicks standing on the side of a well-traveled paved road.  If you have picked up a wild turkey egg, then you can visualize the size of these chicks.  Hatching must have been yesterday if not early this morning.   Thus, it was interesting to observe at least a three-week range in hatching. 

I stopped the car about five feet from the hen. She ran across the road as the tiny chicks followed.  One did not make it.  It was lying in the middle of the road flopping about as most of you have seen when a creature has been hit by a car.  I watched. The hen ran back, stuck its beak within a few inches of the chick as if to sniff it, then whirled and ran back to the rest of her brood.  Obviously, she had made the calculation that endangering herself in the middle of a paved road to save one chick with seven safely waiting for her was a bad plan.  She began ushering them up a small embankment.  I suspected the chick had stumbled and rolled onto its back and simply did not have the physical competence to right itself.  I ran out and scooped it into my cap and took it to the roadside.  Part of the reason it could not flip over is that it was so fat!   It raced up the hill and caught up with its family.  

Nic Korte, Grand Junction
  

[cobirds] E. Bluebird mystery in several chapters; setting prairie shortgrass ecosystem (Bldr Cnty)

Hello to all the bluebird lovers. I need specialized help solving this puzzlement (calling bluebird monitors like Carol McC!): On June 24 I began to be aware of bluebird singing and ID'd it as Eastern thanks to learning the song years ago from Christian Nunes. I was excited: We have never had a bluebird of ANY kind here-- didn't even have them on our yardlist. This one was (trumpets!) species #128. June 25 I realized that although the bird was singing all over the general area, he was favoring our yard. Jean-Pierre got some decent photos, I got an adquate recording. We were increasingly intrigued. June 26 In the morning I happened to notice the little singer had a female companion. She inspected a swallow nestbox very briefly (less than a minute); then exited and flew away. Not to be seen again (by now I was paying close attention to all this) for 2 days. However when I inspected the nestbox that evening, there was already one small blue egg inside! June 27 highly motivated, I was keeping a sharp lookout from this day on. No female but the male was singing up a storm (beautiful song). June 28 another extremely brief sighting of a female. June 29 early a.m. I checked the nestbox. There were now 2 eggs. But no more female this day, that I could see. Male singing a bit less. June 30 ditto July 1 ditto; male really ranging further abroad and not singing much in the yard July 2 -3 ditto; by now I was thinking that the "ghost" female was a very immature or exhausted (from a previous brood) mom July 4 hardly glimpsed the male at all July 5 ditto July 6 the male sat on nearby fence a while; no views of female July 7 checked the nestbox in the evening; there were now 3 matching eggs, all somewhat warm. July 8 observing nestbox obsessively. No views of male or female before 1 pm when I became busy. ????? -- -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Colorado Birds" group. To post to this group, send email to cobirds@googlegroups.com For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/cobirds * 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/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 cobirds+unsubscribe@googlegroups.com. To view this discussion visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/cobirds/BF01CEB6-9FAD-4895-AE37-2F6BFA4E9C28%40comcast.net.