Yessss! Festival of the Cranes is a fun event!
The mornings were chilly but not a deterrent for birders wanting to experience the energy of the dawn fly-out of 30,000 snow geese. Seeing all these birds get up at once and being surrounded by the deafening sound of goose calls and flapping of wings…well…just so overwhelming there is no way to adequately describe it. What a thrill!
But not all the white geese were Snow Geese…
But after all, this is The Festival of the Cranes. Here’s few (of the 10,000) in the light of dawn.
And here’s a Sandhill Crane near the Flight Deck at Bosque del Apache NWR.

Sandhill Crane digiscoped near the Flight Deck at Bosque del Apache NWR 2011-11-17 photo: Greg Miller
Only 140 miles North of Socorro, NM lies the 10,500-foot peak–Sandia Crest. It is near the southernmost part of the range where all 3 rosy-finches can be found. And, some may argue it is the easiest place to see these erratic birds. One can sit inside a warm room, order a meal, and sip on a cup of hot chocolate while viewing all 3 species of rosy-finches at the feeder outside the window! Rosy-finches are voracious eaters and a flock will descend on a feeder and eat as if they were in some terrible hurry to go somewhere on a tight schedule. And then they woosh away as fast and hurried as they came in.
The view from about a mile above Albuquerque in elevation is stunning.
The wait for the show of rosy-finches is helped by watching the other “common” species.
And finally, the stars of the show, the rosy-finches.
That’s all the photos for now. Watch in the future for a blog on the Rosy-Finch Project at Sandia Crest and the interesting work that is happening with banding and studying rosy-finch movements.