That gentleman was my photography parter Carl. We arrived at 7:15AM and 
were joined by a birder around :30. Carl and the other gentleman both saw 
the pyrrhuloxia but it was for a fleeting moment, not enough time to get a 
lock for a picture.

While I didn't see the pyrrhuloxia, I did have the wonderful pleasure of 
listening to it sing for about two minutes! I couldn't locate it while it 
sang. I did get pics of a spotted towhee in the brush next to the alley.

Gary Bowen
Thornton, CO

On Sunday, February 27, 2022 at 11:18:47 AM UTC-7 modise wrote:

> My wife Kristin and I spent about an hour from 8:30 to 9:30 this morning 
> looking for the pyrrhuloxia in Denver County at the hotspot.  There were 
> six or eight of us; one gentleman thought he saw it around 7:30, but a 
> Cooper’s hawk scattered the mixed flock of house finches, juncos, and 
> black-capped chickadees, along with the pyrrhuloxia.
>
> The flock started to move again around 9:00, but no pyrrhuloxia.
>
> Bryan Arnold
> Jeffco, 5,400’
>

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