At an elevation of 1800 m on the outskirts of Colorado Springs, Colorado, among iron-rich hillsides laden with mixed piñon–juniper woodland and Gambel’s oak thickets where Spotted Towhees (Pipilo maculatus) breed densely, a small population of the Canyon Towhee (Melozone fusca) also resides. Along with scattered pockets of the species elsewhere in El Paso County, this population in Red Rock Canyon Open Space represents the northernmost site for the Canyon Towhee. Th Canyon Towhee has been increasing in numbers and spreading slowly northward from its historic range in southeastern Colorado (B. Maynard pers. comm). In the fall of 2019, I documented an occurrence that might be characteristic of such edges of species’ ranges.