For what it’s worth, both of these species (Hooded Warbler and Painted Bunting) 
are SE US breeders as opposed to boreal Canada breeders like a Cape May Warbler 
or Mourning Warbler.  In fact many of the rarer migrants this fall, the 
White-eyed Vireo found by Steve Mlodinov and Nick Moore in Yuma County comes to 
mind or even the Red-shouldered Hawk at North Sterling State Park which was 
classified from photos as of the Arkansas-East Texas population by Brian 
Wheeler, are SE birds.  Perhaps the hot and dry weather of the last 6-8 weeks 
is indicative of a high pressure shield that had deflected northern migrants 
further east while some birds for the SE have been free to wander around.

So that advances an hypothesis as to why these kinds of birds, but why 
relatively so many?  How does this sound—a bird going south up the Uncompahgre 
Valley might be daunted by the prospect of the San Juan mountains looming right 
ahead.  Experienced birds that have been that way before know that if the grit 
their teeth (bills?) and take the flying leap, the other side of the mountains 
isn’t too far.  Those who haven’t been that way before might decide to get some 
extra fat on the bones.  So the question is, is there a (statistically) higher 
proportion of hatch-year birds at Ridgeway vis-à-vis Barr or Chico?

Bill Kaempfer
Boulder

From: cobirds@googlegroups.com [mailto:cobirds@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of 
meredith
Sent: Monday, September 21, 2015 6:08 PM
To: Colorado Birds
Subject: [cobirds] Re: Ridgway Banding and comment on rare birds.

Nick,

I think most active birders would have picked out the same two birds from 
Amanda's list as rare that you did, and I had been thinking the same thing that 
you were before reading your post - Wow, very low numbers for the two weeks we 
band in Ridgway but two rarities.  On the other hand, we at Barr are having a 
pretty good year in terms of numbers so far, but zero rarities.  My memory is 
that Chico has not seen many rarities either.  I have been attributing that to 
the lack of any major weather disruptions, but of course have no idea whether 
that is accurate. (And then I have no explanation for how a HOWA and PABU made 
it to Ridgway.....)  So, I guess I don't think rarities as a group can be 
measured in terms of 1 per anything - some periods we will have many and others 
none.

Meredith McBurney
Barr Lake

On Sunday, September 20, 2015 at 9:11:09 PM UTC-6, Nick Komar wrote:
Interesting that among only 64 captures, two were rare (Painted Bunting and 
Hooded Warbler). I usually think of a rare occurrence being closer to 1 per 
thousand. But maybe 1 per hundred is closer. "Rare" is a subjective term. 
Finding rare birds is one of my favorite aspects of birding. But what is truly 
rare? I'd be curious to know what other birders in Colorado consider the 
definition of rare from a birding perspective. Reply to list, or privately to 
me. I'll tally the responses and summarize them (anonymously) on Cobirds.

Nick Komar
Fort Collins

Sent from my iPhone

On Sep 20, 2015, at 7:39 PM, Amanda Ziegelbauer 
<atzieg...@gmail.com<javascript:>> wrote:
We had a great last week in Ridgway! Thursday morning brought us a beautiful 
after hatch-year male Virginia's Warbler. We also had a surprise bird that was 
caught early Friday morning - a hatch-year Painted Bunting! Pictures are 
available.

End of season tally:

Willow Flycatcher - 2
Black-capped Chickadee - 3
House Wren - 4
Ruby-crowned Kinglet - 1
Gray Catbird - 4
Orange-crowned Warbler - 2
Virginia's Warbler - 1
Yellow Warbler - 3
Macgillivray's Warbler - 4
Wilson's Warbler 20
Hooded Warbler - 1
Song Sparrow - 11
Lincoln's Sparrow - 4
Gambel's White-crowned Sparrow - 1
Mountain White-crowned Sparrow - 1
Black-headed Grosbeak - 1
Painted Bunting - 1

Thank you to all our amazing volunteers and visitors! We had a beautiful season.

Amanda Ziegelbauer
Bander
Ridgway State Park Banding Station
Bird Conservancy of the Rockies

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