Monday, 16 February 2026

[cobirds] Re: Documenting crossbills, warbling-vireos, etc.

All:

I cannot agree more thoroughly with Ted's cautions about Merlin, and, particularly, his cautions once we get into the warbling-vireo season. I, too, find many warbling vireo songs far from cut-and-dried enumerators of species, and please, please, please, don't take Merlin's word on it as gospel. Save the recording. Save the spectrogram. Both species have been detected during the breeding season at Barr Lake, and there's absolutely no guarantee against warbling-vireo hanky-panky. We want our understanding of the occurrence parameters in eastern Colorado to be based on provable facts, not intuition, supposition, or blind trust in technology.

Enjoy,

Tony Leukering
Denver

On Sunday, February 15, 2026 at 7:03:21 PM UTC-7 Ted Floyd wrote:
Thanks, everybody, for the recent discussions about documenting crossbills and warbling-vireos in Colorado. Inspired by a recent report from Eric DeFonso of crossbills at the Green Mountain West trailhead, near the high point along Flagstaff Rd., Boulder Co., I went up there myself earlier this sunny Sun., Feb. 15. But it was windy—too windy, really—at Green Mountain, so I retreated downslope a bit to the comparatively leeward Long Canyon trailhead, where the wind wasn't nearly as strong. And, oh yes, there were crossbills there.

As far as I can tell, all were type 2 ("ponderosa pine") red crossbills. And how do we know they were type 2s, as opposed to type 3s, or type πs, or, for that matter, Cassia crossbills? Because of the diagnostic sound spectrograms of birds like this one, and these two, and also these two or three. Which brings us to Mark Obmascik's recent musings on the identification of Cassia crossbills in Colorado. I concur with Mark: It is essentially impossible to credibly identify birds in the "Red Crossbill complex" in Colorado without an assist from technology. But there's a big "but" here: I didn't fire up Merlin, not even once, the whole time I was up Flagstaff this morning. Rather, I made recordings, studied the spectrographic output, and confirmed that all the crossbills up there were type 2s. Maybe that's a mere quibble, differing exegeses of "crossbill theology." But I dunno, it feels different, to me, to say: "Because Merlin said so" vs. "Because I figured it out on my own." In any event, it remains the case that we require technology, in the form of sound spectrograms, whether Merlin-vetted or human-vetted, to get the ID correct here in Colorado. Which, as Mark implies, is a paradigm shift. Culture shock, even.

I actually heard more "toop notes" up there than flight calls. Type 2 "toop notes" sound like this, and also like this. They are clear and ringing like flight calls, and I can totally see that one might imagine they're the flight calls of a "good" crossbill—a Cassia perhaps, or one of the rarer (for us) red crossbill types other than type 2. But they are spectrographically unlike the flight calls of any crossbill expected in Colorado. This is fun: If you jack up the type 2 red crossbills flight call a kilohertz or two, you get pygmy nuthatch; and if you raise it another kilohertz or two, you get hairy woodpecker; and if you're on a boat at sea, your hairy woodpecker is become a red phalarope. Who'da thunk?

Along with the type 2 flight calls and "toop notes," there was full-on crossbill song up there. Sorry about the wind noise; someone musta left the gate open up at Green Mountain. Anyhow, it's a cool song. I put in my notes that the run-on, "random" song of the type 2 red crossbill sounds a bit like the song of a dipper or even a woodcock.

I made videos, too. They're not great, but they get the job done: They show type 2 red crossbills caught in the act of giving both flight calls and "toop notes." Yes, flight calls are routinely given by perched birds.

And some photos. While probably of limited utility for field identification, photos of crossbills can contribute importantly to a recent finding, both surprising and counterintuitive, by Blanca Fernández-Eslava and collaborators that male crossbills acquire a female-like plumage aspect as they age. That is quite the opposite of the "standard model," wherein female birds acquire male-like plumage aspects as they age; examples in Colorado are the wood duck, western tanager, and Wilson warbler.

Anyhow, here are a few crossbill pics from this morning:

 ReCr 01.jpg

 ReCr 02.jpg

 ReCr 03.jpg

And for fans of weird & unexpected catchlights:

 ReCr 04.jpg

The Douglas-fir cone crop up there was insane, which insanity I duly iNatted. (And which Owen Robertson already has research-graded. Thanks, brother.) You heard it here first: If type 4 ("Douglas-fir") red crossbills make their way to Colorado anytime soon, it's going to be up Flagstaff. Okay, it was Eric who put that idea in my mind, not gonna lie. Anyhow, there must be untold millions of juicy douglas-fir cones up there. The nuthatches seemed happy about it. So did the siskins.

Back to crossbills. A possible take on the preceding: Okay, that's all well and good, but can't we just say "Red Crossbill," at least in the Front Range metro region, and be done with it? Yes, that is true. I, personally, think it is a worthwhile challenge to try to figure out the different types, but, for now, we treat them all as the same species. Although...what about Cassia crossbill?? It's not far at all, the way the crossbill flies, from Grand Co. In fact, Grand & Boulder cos. share a long border. So why not?

In any event, that same take isn't gonna cut it come warbling-vireo time, not even three months out. Because the two warbling-vireos are indeed full species, according to current science, and both of them are here in the Front Range metro region. David Suddjian reminds us that the songs of Eastern and Western warbling-vireos are distinct, and I don't disagree. But I am wary of our ability to tell them apart, especially where they overlap, as here. Do they differ, to our human ears, between Nevada and New Jersey? Sure. Between San Miguel Co., Colo., and New Jersey? Yes, I would say so. But all up and down the I-25 corridor, from Ft. Collins to Pueblo and beyond, where most of us live and bird? I'm not convinced of that. I've been studying these birds' songs intensively for close to 20 years now, and I simply don't trust my ears, or, let's be honest, my brain all that much. I think it's probably true that there are some, well, no-brainers in the mix. But birds on migration? Birds exposed to the "wrong" vireo's song? Hybrids or intergrades, perish the thought? I imagine there's an awful lot of that going on here. And then mix in all the undeniable subjectivity and suggestibility at play in the human engagement of the natural world, and...yeah. Speaking for myself, I'm not good enough! I'm either going to upload spectrogram-supported sound recordings to my eBird checklists, or I'm going to happily and proudly call my warbling-vireos unidentified.

But can we, please, pretty please, agree on one thing? "Merlin" isn't adequate for the ID. It really isn't. And please keep in mind: I am one of the loudest champions of Merlin. It's a magnificent guide, pedagogically brilliant, informing and inspiring millions of peeps who might not otherwise notice birds. Merlin is all those things. It really is. But, again, Merlin is, in the first and final analysis, a guide. A suggestion, a recommendation. And so, as the old saying goes, we "trust but verify." The great thing is, Merlin makes it easy! Merlin wonderfully outputs spectrograms, and saves the audio, for every single bird it provisionally identifies for you. When Merlin says "Eastern Warbling-Vireo" (it will actually say "Eastern Warbling Vireo," without the hyphen, but that's a matter for another day) or "Cassia Crossbill" or even "White-winged Crossbill" or, what the heck, "White-winged Tern," think of it the way you might inform the clerk at Buc-ee's in Berthoud that you're holding a winning Colorado Lottery ticket. Great—but you'd better be prepared to produce the goods: a valid permutation of lottery numbers for the cashier, or the spectrogram for your friendly neighborhood eBird reviewer. And don't even get me started on "photos," or, in the case of crossbills and warbling-vireos, "recording." As in, "lotto ticket," am I right?

Alrighty, I've just now been reminded—re-reminded, actually—that I promised to go pick up the Chinese food, getting cold now, at Mr. Sake Sushi & Grill. I'm Audi...

Ted Floyd
Lafayette, Boulder Co.

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[cobirds] Re: Documenting crossbills, warbling-vireos, etc.

Ted's observations and notes are helpful and I will enthusiastically follow his lead. Our ability to see bird sounds like crossbills and warbling-vireos via spectrograms and use those for documentation is  miraculous. What Ted doesn't highlight in his recent post is the bottleneck​.  ​The multiple time consuming steps needed to provide those recordings to ebird (​and to a lesser extent also ---what he doesn't want us to get him started on--- "photos.")​ are formidable.  The complicated relationship between ebird the phone app, and Merlin, and ebird the desktop forces extra steps.

I try to just accept that I'll have to:
  1. Trim the recording  to isolate the specific bird sound.
  2. Export the audio file from Merlin using the Share icon to save the .wav file to my phone. (Because eBird requires the actual audio file .wav allowing researchers to listen to the data and run their own analysis.)
  3. Transfer the file to my computer using a cloud service like Google Drive, iCloud, or email.
  4. Open my submitted checklist on the eBird website and click the "Add Media" button.
  5. Upload the audio file directly to the corresponding species on my list.
The frustration of seeing someone just note "Merlin" on an unusual sighting makes me want ​them to get a popup: "Your sighting mentions 'Merlin or photos in the text,' please note that without an uploaded .wav audio file or a photo, this sighting cannot be verified for public records."

​Best,
Kristi S.
La Plata Co.


On Sunday, February 15, 2026 at 4:03:21 PM UTC-10 Ted Floyd wrote:
Thanks, everybody, for the recent discussions about documenting crossbills and warbling-vireos in Colorado. Inspired by a recent report from Eric DeFonso of crossbills at the Green Mountain West trailhead, near the high point along Flagstaff Rd., Boulder Co., I went up there myself earlier this sunny Sun., Feb. 15. But it was windy—too windy, really—at Green Mountain, so I retreated downslope a bit to the comparatively leeward Long Canyon trailhead, where the wind wasn't nearly as strong. And, oh yes, there were crossbills there.

As far as I can tell, all were type 2 ("ponderosa pine") red crossbills. And how do we know they were type 2s, as opposed to type 3s, or type πs, or, for that matter, Cassia crossbills? Because of the diagnostic sound spectrograms of birds like this one, and these two, and also these two or three. Which brings us to Mark Obmascik's recent musings on the identification of Cassia crossbills in Colorado. I concur with Mark: It is essentially impossible to credibly identify birds in the "Red Crossbill complex" in Colorado without an assist from technology. But there's a big "but" here: I didn't fire up Merlin, not even once, the whole time I was up Flagstaff this morning. Rather, I made recordings, studied the spectrographic output, and confirmed that all the crossbills up there were type 2s. Maybe that's a mere quibble, differing exegeses of "crossbill theology." But I dunno, it feels different, to me, to say: "Because Merlin said so" vs. "Because I figured it out on my own." In any event, it remains the case that we require technology, in the form of sound spectrograms, whether Merlin-vetted or human-vetted, to get the ID correct here in Colorado. Which, as Mark implies, is a paradigm shift. Culture shock, even.

I actually heard more "toop notes" up there than flight calls. Type 2 "toop notes" sound like this, and also like this. They are clear and ringing like flight calls, and I can totally see that one might imagine they're the flight calls of a "good" crossbill—a Cassia perhaps, or one of the rarer (for us) red crossbill types other than type 2. But they are spectrographically unlike the flight calls of any crossbill expected in Colorado. This is fun: If you jack up the type 2 red crossbills flight call a kilohertz or two, you get pygmy nuthatch; and if you raise it another kilohertz or two, you get hairy woodpecker; and if you're on a boat at sea, your hairy woodpecker is become a red phalarope. Who'da thunk?

Along with the type 2 flight calls and "toop notes," there was full-on crossbill song up there. Sorry about the wind noise; someone musta left the gate open up at Green Mountain. Anyhow, it's a cool song. I put in my notes that the run-on, "random" song of the type 2 red crossbill sounds a bit like the song of a dipper or even a woodcock.

I made videos, too. They're not great, but they get the job done: They show type 2 red crossbills caught in the act of giving both flight calls and "toop notes." Yes, flight calls are routinely given by perched birds.

And some photos. While probably of limited utility for field identification, photos of crossbills can contribute importantly to a recent finding, both surprising and counterintuitive, by Blanca Fernández-Eslava and collaborators that male crossbills acquire a female-like plumage aspect as they age. That is quite the opposite of the "standard model," wherein female birds acquire male-like plumage aspects as they age; examples in Colorado are the wood duck, western tanager, and Wilson warbler.

Anyhow, here are a few crossbill pics from this morning:

 ReCr 01.jpg

 ReCr 02.jpg

 ReCr 03.jpg

And for fans of weird & unexpected catchlights:

 ReCr 04.jpg

The Douglas-fir cone crop up there was insane, which insanity I duly iNatted. (And which Owen Robertson already has research-graded. Thanks, brother.) You heard it here first: If type 4 ("Douglas-fir") red crossbills make their way to Colorado anytime soon, it's going to be up Flagstaff. Okay, it was Eric who put that idea in my mind, not gonna lie. Anyhow, there must be untold millions of juicy douglas-fir cones up there. The nuthatches seemed happy about it. So did the siskins.

Back to crossbills. A possible take on the preceding: Okay, that's all well and good, but can't we just say "Red Crossbill," at least in the Front Range metro region, and be done with it? Yes, that is true. I, personally, think it is a worthwhile challenge to try to figure out the different types, but, for now, we treat them all as the same species. Although...what about Cassia crossbill?? It's not far at all, the way the crossbill flies, from Grand Co. In fact, Grand & Boulder cos. share a long border. So why not?

In any event, that same take isn't gonna cut it come warbling-vireo time, not even three months out. Because the two warbling-vireos are indeed full species, according to current science, and both of them are here in the Front Range metro region. David Suddjian reminds us that the songs of Eastern and Western warbling-vireos are distinct, and I don't disagree. But I am wary of our ability to tell them apart, especially where they overlap, as here. Do they differ, to our human ears, between Nevada and New Jersey? Sure. Between San Miguel Co., Colo., and New Jersey? Yes, I would say so. But all up and down the I-25 corridor, from Ft. Collins to Pueblo and beyond, where most of us live and bird? I'm not convinced of that. I've been studying these birds' songs intensively for close to 20 years now, and I simply don't trust my ears, or, let's be honest, my brain all that much. I think it's probably true that there are some, well, no-brainers in the mix. But birds on migration? Birds exposed to the "wrong" vireo's song? Hybrids or intergrades, perish the thought? I imagine there's an awful lot of that going on here. And then mix in all the undeniable subjectivity and suggestibility at play in the human engagement of the natural world, and...yeah. Speaking for myself, I'm not good enough! I'm either going to upload spectrogram-supported sound recordings to my eBird checklists, or I'm going to happily and proudly call my warbling-vireos unidentified.

But can we, please, pretty please, agree on one thing? "Merlin" isn't adequate for the ID. It really isn't. And please keep in mind: I am one of the loudest champions of Merlin. It's a magnificent guide, pedagogically brilliant, informing and inspiring millions of peeps who might not otherwise notice birds. Merlin is all those things. It really is. But, again, Merlin is, in the first and final analysis, a guide. A suggestion, a recommendation. And so, as the old saying goes, we "trust but verify." The great thing is, Merlin makes it easy! Merlin wonderfully outputs spectrograms, and saves the audio, for every single bird it provisionally identifies for you. When Merlin says "Eastern Warbling-Vireo" (it will actually say "Eastern Warbling Vireo," without the hyphen, but that's a matter for another day) or "Cassia Crossbill" or even "White-winged Crossbill" or, what the heck, "White-winged Tern," think of it the way you might inform the clerk at Buc-ee's in Berthoud that you're holding a winning Colorado Lottery ticket. Great—but you'd better be prepared to produce the goods: a valid permutation of lottery numbers for the cashier, or the spectrogram for your friendly neighborhood eBird reviewer. And don't even get me started on "photos," or, in the case of crossbills and warbling-vireos, "recording." As in, "lotto ticket," am I right?

Alrighty, I've just now been reminded—re-reminded, actually—that I promised to go pick up the Chinese food, getting cold now, at Mr. Sake Sushi & Grill. I'm Audi...

Ted Floyd
Lafayette, Boulder Co.

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[cobirds] Water is Running Cranes are a Coming

Drove by the Monte Vista NWR this morning (2/16) and saw that the wells are running and flooding into the wetland fields. The birds are flocking into these areas, and will venture out for feeding mornings and evenings. Fantastic time of year to be out there. I will try to keep you posted on best places to watch, as the birds do make adjustments during the next 5 weeks. 

I will again be leading a birdwalk at 10 on Friday March 6th. We bird at Home Lake which is now open water and has an abundance of waterfowl. Kingfisher has also been hanging around as well.  You will need to sign up on the MV Crane Festival website to participate. Let the birding begin!!

John Rawinski
Monte Vista, CO

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Sunday, 15 February 2026

[cobirds] The reported Snow Goose at Denver City Park

Hi all:

Back in December, I saw a goose at Denver City Park that I identified as a Snow x Cackling Goose hybrid: ML647525562 - Snow x Cackling Goose (hybrid) - Macaulay Library

This bird looks somewhat superficially like a juv Snow Goose, but juvs of blue Snow Geese are entirely dark (ML650527380 - Snow Goose - Macaulay Library) while juvs of white Snow Geese are mostly white (ML650779634 - Snow Goose - Macaulay Library), lacking my bird's mostly dark upperparts. A bird looking very much like this one was also reported from the South Platte River in Denver in late January.

I've also seen photos of a white goose in Washington Park that looks like a Snow x Ross's Goose hybrid, given the extensive blackish base to the small bill on a bird with a distinct grin patch.

Hybrids are something to consider when looking at white geese in Denver in winter, where neither Snow nor Ross's is at all common. In my experience, hybrid geese are nearly as likely in the county as pure Snow or Ross's, at least in winter.

Happy Birding,

Tony Leukering
Denver

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[cobirds] Re: Juvenile western bluebird and Merlin

Hey Bill:

That is decidedly a juv Western Bluebird. Juveniles of Townsend's Solitaire, in addition to having spotting below, have spotting on the head, unlike juvenile bluebirds.

Western Bluebird


Enjoy,

Tony Leukering
Denver

On Saturday, February 14, 2026 at 9:31:11 AM UTC-7 Bill Kosar wrote:
   I took this picture about 12 years ago in northern New Mexico but I had not identified what kind of bird it was. As part of a current project I needed a good ID on it. It sort of resembled a juvenile robin but was really not a good match, several online tools came up with that ID. Merlin has said it was a Wesstern bluebird which I think is correct.

   I know this site is supposed to be about Colorado birds but I seen many mountain and western bluebirds in Colorado so I thought this post was appropriate. I tried Merlin on a few other pictures as a test and I was impressed with its accuracy but once in a while it was way off.

Comments are welcome!

Bill Kosar
El Paso country

_MG_6500_cr.jpg

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[cobirds] Documenting crossbills, warbling-vireos, etc.

Thanks, everybody, for the recent discussions about documenting crossbills and warbling-vireos in Colorado. Inspired by a recent report from Eric DeFonso of crossbills at the Green Mountain West trailhead, near the high point along Flagstaff Rd., Boulder Co., I went up there myself earlier this sunny Sun., Feb. 15. But it was windy—too windy, really—at Green Mountain, so I retreated downslope a bit to the comparatively leeward Long Canyon trailhead, where the wind wasn't nearly as strong. And, oh yes, there were crossbills there.

As far as I can tell, all were type 2 ("ponderosa pine") red crossbills. And how do we know they were type 2s, as opposed to type 3s, or type πs, or, for that matter, Cassia crossbills? Because of the diagnostic sound spectrograms of birds like this one, and these two, and also these two or three. Which brings us to Mark Obmascik's recent musings on the identification of Cassia crossbills in Colorado. I concur with Mark: It is essentially impossible to credibly identify birds in the "Red Crossbill complex" in Colorado without an assist from technology. But there's a big "but" here: I didn't fire up Merlin, not even once, the whole time I was up Flagstaff this morning. Rather, I made recordings, studied the spectrographic output, and confirmed that all the crossbills up there were type 2s. Maybe that's a mere quibble, differing exegeses of "crossbill theology." But I dunno, it feels different, to me, to say: "Because Merlin said so" vs. "Because I figured it out on my own." In any event, it remains the case that we require technology, in the form of sound spectrograms, whether Merlin-vetted or human-vetted, to get the ID correct here in Colorado. Which, as Mark implies, is a paradigm shift. Culture shock, even.

I actually heard more "toop notes" up there than flight calls. Type 2 "toop notes" sound like this, and also like this. They are clear and ringing like flight calls, and I can totally see that one might imagine they're the flight calls of a "good" crossbill—a Cassia perhaps, or one of the rarer (for us) red crossbill types other than type 2. But they are spectrographically unlike the flight calls of any crossbill expected in Colorado. This is fun: If you jack up the type 2 red crossbills flight call a kilohertz or two, you get pygmy nuthatch; and if you raise it another kilohertz or two, you get hairy woodpecker; and if you're on a boat at sea, your hairy woodpecker is become a red phalarope. Who'da thunk?

Along with the type 2 flight calls and "toop notes," there was full-on crossbill song up there. Sorry about the wind noise; someone musta left the gate open up at Green Mountain. Anyhow, it's a cool song. I put in my notes that the run-on, "random" song of the type 2 red crossbill sounds a bit like the song of a dipper or even a woodcock.

I made videos, too. They're not great, but they get the job done: They show type 2 red crossbills caught in the act of giving both flight calls and "toop notes." Yes, flight calls are routinely given by perched birds.

And some photos. While probably of limited utility for field identification, photos of crossbills can contribute importantly to a recent finding, both surprising and counterintuitive, by Blanca Fernández-Eslava and collaborators that male crossbills acquire a female-like plumage aspect as they age. That is quite the opposite of the "standard model," wherein female birds acquire male-like plumage aspects as they age; examples in Colorado are the wood duck, western tanager, and Wilson warbler.

Anyhow, here are a few crossbill pics from this morning:





And for fans of weird & unexpected catchlights:



The Douglas-fir cone crop up there was insane, which insanity I duly iNatted. (And which Owen Robertson already has research-graded. Thanks, brother.) You heard it here first: If type 4 ("Douglas-fir") red crossbills make their way to Colorado anytime soon, it's going to be up Flagstaff. Okay, it was Eric who put that idea in my mind, not gonna lie. Anyhow, there must be untold millions of juicy douglas-fir cones up there. The nuthatches seemed happy about it. So did the siskins.

Back to crossbills. A possible take on the preceding: Okay, that's all well and good, but can't we just say "Red Crossbill," at least in the Front Range metro region, and be done with it? Yes, that is true. I, personally, think it is a worthwhile challenge to try to figure out the different types, but, for now, we treat them all as the same species. Although...what about Cassia crossbill?? It's not far at all, the way the crossbill flies, from Grand Co. In fact, Grand & Boulder cos. share a long border. So why not?

In any event, that same take isn't gonna cut it come warbling-vireo time, not even three months out. Because the two warbling-vireos are indeed full species, according to current science, and both of them are here in the Front Range metro region. David Suddjian reminds us that the songs of Eastern and Western warbling-vireos are distinct, and I don't disagree. But I am wary of our ability to tell them apart, especially where they overlap, as here. Do they differ, to our human ears, between Nevada and New Jersey? Sure. Between San Miguel Co., Colo., and New Jersey? Yes, I would say so. But all up and down the I-25 corridor, from Ft. Collins to Pueblo and beyond, where most of us live and bird? I'm not convinced of that. I've been studying these birds' songs intensively for close to 20 years now, and I simply don't trust my ears, or, let's be honest, my brain all that much. I think it's probably true that there are some, well, no-brainers in the mix. But birds on migration? Birds exposed to the "wrong" vireo's song? Hybrids or intergrades, perish the thought? I imagine there's an awful lot of that going on here. And then mix in all the undeniable subjectivity and suggestibility at play in the human engagement of the natural world, and...yeah. Speaking for myself, I'm not good enough! I'm either going to upload spectrogram-supported sound recordings to my eBird checklists, or I'm going to happily and proudly call my warbling-vireos unidentified.

But can we, please, pretty please, agree on one thing? "Merlin" isn't adequate for the ID. It really isn't. And please keep in mind: I am one of the loudest champions of Merlin. It's a magnificent guide, pedagogically brilliant, informing and inspiring millions of peeps who might not otherwise notice birds. Merlin is all those things. It really is. But, again, Merlin is, in the first and final analysis, a guide. A suggestion, a recommendation. And so, as the old saying goes, we "trust but verify." The great thing is, Merlin makes it easy! Merlin wonderfully outputs spectrograms, and saves the audio, for every single bird it provisionally identifies for you. When Merlin says "Eastern Warbling-Vireo" (it will actually say "Eastern Warbling Vireo," without the hyphen, but that's a matter for another day) or "Cassia Crossbill" or even "White-winged Crossbill" or, what the heck, "White-winged Tern," think of it the way you might inform the clerk at Buc-ee's in Berthoud that you're holding a winning Colorado Lottery ticket. Great—but you'd better be prepared to produce the goods: a valid permutation of lottery numbers for the cashier, or the spectrogram for your friendly neighborhood eBird reviewer. And don't even get me started on "photos," or, in the case of crossbills and warbling-vireos, "recording." As in, "lotto ticket," am I right?

Alrighty, I've just now been reminded—re-reminded, actually—that I promised to go pick up the Chinese food, getting cold now, at Mr. Sake Sushi & Grill. I'm Audi...

Ted Floyd
Lafayette, Boulder Co.

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Saturday, 14 February 2026

Re: [cobirds] Juvenile western bluebird and Merlin

After a little study, I'm going with Western Bluebird. A Solitaire looks more scaled than spotted. This bird looks more spotted than scaled. Solitaires have longer tails. This birds tail is shorter. 
Just my opinion. 
Ira Sanders 
Golden 


On Feb 14, 2026 at 2:37 PM, T. Luke George <t.luke.george@gmail.com> wrote:

Tail seems too short for a solitaire, I think juvenile Western Bluebird is correct.

T. Luke George, PhD
Master Instructor, ​Colorado ​State University
Department of Fish, Wildlife, and Conservation Biology
Wagar 110
970-491-3311 (o)
P​rofessor Emeritus, Humboldt State University
707-499-4053 (c)
"what is it you plan to do with your one wild and precious life?" Mary Oliver


On Sat, Feb 14, 2026 at 1:51 PM Steve Stachowiak <birdingemails@gmail.com> wrote:
Bill - It appears to be a juvenile Townsend's Solitaire.  Steve

On Feb 14, 2026, at 9:31 AM, Bill Kosar <bill_kosar@msn.com> wrote:

   I took this picture about 12 years ago in northern New Mexico but I had not identified what kind of bird it was. As part of a current project I needed a good ID on it. It sort of resembled a juvenile robin but was really not a good match, several online tools came up with that ID. Merlin has said it was a Wesstern bluebird which I think is correct.

   I know this site is supposed to be about Colorado birds but I seen many mountain and western bluebirds in Colorado so I thought this post was appropriate. I tried Merlin on a few other pictures as a test and I was impressed with its accuracy but once in a while it was way off.

Comments are welcome!

Bill Kosar
El Paso country

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