I checked out the Cassia crossbill stakeout feeders north of Granby today and saw many crossbills.
Can I pretend that these crossbills sounded or looked different than the hundreds I have seen over the years at our home feeders 20 miles away? No.
But there was the Merlin app on my phone, identifying a Cassia crossbill by sound when the birds dived onto the feeders or flew overhead. Merlin did not identify a single red crossbill, though there were times I saw and heard crossbills without a Merlin ID.
There has been some good talk on CObirds lately about the pluses and minuses of technology in birding. Here's a species that I never would have ID'd without tech. In fact, with this bird I'm relying 100 percent on tech for the ID (or a veto from an eBird reviewer.)
Today's experience makes me wonder if all the crossbills I identified at my home feeders over the years were really red crossbills. Next time I'm pulling out my Merlin app and listening.
As a side note, am I correct to remember that this species originally was believed to live in only one limited area in Idaho that was swept by wildfire, and that there were fears at the time that the bird might have been wiped out? And then I remember Christian Nunes camping some years later in summer near Church Park in Grand County (maybe 10 miles from today's feeder site) and identifying Cassia crossbill by sound. I biked many times in that area afterward hoping to see the birds in summer, but nada.
I salute birders with keen ears, and I salute Merlin.
Here's a pic, not that this matters with this species.

Good birding,
Mark Obmascik
Tabernash, CO