Now that I've got some time on it, it's still too rich on the pilots (I can start it from Dead cold, 30*F, no choke and one blip to 4k will allow it to settle back to my normal idle).... so it's time to lower the floats a touch or mess with the air/fuel mixture screws.
And this bike was a recovery from being abandoned in Denver ~ a shop there may have dropped one pilot size from the factory before I get my hands on it ~ though the fiche (IIRC) listed 32.5's as one of the stock options.
Duane: You've got the basic idea, less atmospeheric pressure up here at altitude, so less pressure squeezing air into a cubic foot of space and thus less O2 for the engine. Cold changes that a bit as cold air is more dense (which is why some bikes that get tuned in the summer will run lean through the winter) as well. And this has been an on-going process where I started with the air/fuel mixture screws by setting them to a universal 2.5 turns out. this is Pretty standard for a baseline adjustment, and on most bikes I've owned, it's been a final adjustment too. I dropped the Mains 4 sizes at the same time and shimmed up the stock needles. I made a Lot of big adjustments, but the bike Barely ran before I did that, and ran much better (but no where near perfectly) afterwards.
I've also got a decade of time under my belt fiddling with carbs and adjusting them every couple of years as I move to different places that were more than 2k feet different in elevations. The best time was durring my dynojet dyno training when I Really got to see what changes felt like and looked like on the dyno. I got to calibrate my butt-dyno then. :D
Anyway, the deciding factor will be as soon as I get out for a longer ride. Last time it loaded up so bad at low throttle openings (cruising down the highway) that if I'd close the throttle and pull in the clutch, it'd die from fouled plugs and be a Bitch to get started again. I hope to get a thousand mile trip in the last weekend of this month (with a lay-over at a friends house were I can tinker a bit as needed).