Tuesday, April 7, 2015

Southwest #2: Tristate birding (319-322)

When you grow up on the Great Lakes, and you spend your days exploring woodlands and water, Bullhead is a very strange place. There are no lawns--certainly property, but it's hard to tell where one ends and another begins when it's just a bunch of gravel and dirt everywhere. It's dry, very very dry, and not much of anything, even cacti grow. Bullhead City, Arizona, and Laughlin, Nevada, straddle the (mighty) Colorado River, and here, where there is some water, and even some vegetation, there is a little more action. So we spent quite a bit of time walking up and down along the river, checking out the birds, but also the feral cats (we did not see the raccoons or skunks that hang out with them) and apparently, a resident beaver. Wildlife!

The first bird of major interest was this brown one skulking around...very tricky to get in clear view. We managed, though light was clearly fading. I was completely unfamiliar with this bird (you know, one of those ones you don't even really pay attention to in your guidebook because it's range is so very limited. It looked an awful lot like a cardinal, but obviously it is not with that brown colouring. So, it was very cool to locate it in the book and discover we'd seen a bird I wasn't even really aware existed (though it SHOULD have rung a bell--it's the first bird in the alphabetical listings on Whatbird.com). Fortunately, we ended up seeing them quite a few times along the river...but always so difficult to photograph!

#319: Abert's Towhee; Colorado River Heritage Greenway Parks and Trails (Laughlin); December 2014
Another mockingbird on another prickly tree

There were many, many ducks fighting the flow of the Colorado. So many American coots--I really should have taken a pictures just to show how many--really unbelievable! However, we were always on the lookout to see what else might be mixed in with them, and we weren't disappointed!
Northern Pintail
We also spotted some ring-necked ducks (in addition to some we had seen in a golf course pond earlier on the way to Oatman)--a bird I have somehow managed not to see, or pick out, at home.

#320: Ring-necked duck; Colorado River Heritage Greenway Parks and Trails (Laughlin); December 2014
And then, we hit what I might call the duck jackpot (while most people in Laughlin are looking for some other kind of jackpot). A pintail, ring-necked ducks and American wigeons in a little flotilla together!
The duck jackpot even gave us a bonus round---another lifer--another duck I have no excuses for not finding closer to home.

#321: Redhead; Colorado River between Lauglin and Bullhead City; December 2014
There were so many yellow-rumped warblers--some birds were in absolute abundance, like the coots.


My best guess is orange-crowned warbler
Walking along the river, we heard a familiar sound, which helped us to locate this flicker. I think it's a regular northern flicker, though I secretly hoped it was a gilded. Unfortunately I can't tell for sure with this picture...I'll have to find another one!
We were both incredibly excited when we realized the little blue-grey bird darting around was a blue-grey gnatcatcher! I remember when one lone one was reported at Mud Lake years ago and I wandered around for hours looking for it to no avail.

#322: Blue-gray gnatcatcher; Laughlin/Bullhead City; December 2014

Further along and across a few state lines, we found ourselves in amazing Utah, in Zion National Park. Our focus wasn't birding (it was, however, reaching the peak of Angels Landing), but we did manage to spot a few birds at the base of the trail, including this cutie, a species that I forgot I already saw on a previous trip west.
Bushtit

Another bushtit
Quite certain this is a golden-crowned kinglet, with the giveaway hidden

All in all, another wonderful trip.
Dear amazing, amazing Utah: I'll be back. 

Wednesday, January 28, 2015

American Southwest #1: The Travelling Birder, and a New Year, New Destinations, New Birds (#310-318)

I swear I don't mean to post only when I travel, but it's easy not post the local birds I've already seen, but I absolutely can't get away with not posting new life birds! Which inevitably happens on my travels.

So, without making any more excuses, I'll get started. I was very fortunate to spend New Year's in the American Southwest. Of course, birding was not the primary objective, but we do manage to squeeze it in. When Matt had visited last year without me, he came home with all kinds of pictures of dreambirds that were so foreign and wonderful and outside my scope of experience--limited to these drawings in my bird guides, i.e., Roadrunner, Phainopepla, etc.

So it was my time to get caught up. Inevitably a visit to this area involves landing in Vegas, AGAIN, a city for which my primary objective is to get the heck out of there. While feathers are found in abundance on the strip, it's not very interesting in terms of birds (On my last day, I learned that there is actually a bird viewing preserve in nearby Henderson. Next time, and of course there will be a next time, I'll check it out). If you're not interested in shopping, or impressing people with fancy clothes, or gambling at the "money extraction factories," that town sure leaves a lot to be desired. Fortunately, it is surrounded by much awesomeness, just a few hours' drive away.

So, you can imagine my delight when we are finally headed down Flamingo Drive, away from Las Vegas. It's my first visit to Red Rock. I'd never been to this little Conservation Area so close to Vegas, always opting for the big draws - the Grand Canyon, Death Valley, etc. I was pleasantly surprised and the drive through Red Rock was really nice.
First bird spotted. It reminds me of a robin, but of course it's not quite right. I'm embarrassed that I don't know what it is. I've been slacking lately, and don't know every single bird in the book anymore. I have to get the guide out, but when I do, I'm quite certain: it's Say's Phoebe.

#310; Say's Phoebe; Red Rock Canyon Visitor Centre; December 2014
Also just by the parked cars is a clearly new bird. Something feels not quite as satisfying when you spot a lifer in a parking lots, but it's still one of the most exciting things ever. And a little frustrating when you're not actually really sure what it is.

#311: Rock Wren;  Red Rock Canyon Visitor Centre; December 2014
Generally, the Red Rock scenic loop is dry desert, with big rocks. Just think "dirt" and "rocks" and that's basically what it is (on an impressive scale, to be certain). However, at one of the stops, there is some more vegetation and it's quite different from the rest. A ranger has told us it's a good spot to bird (birds liking trees and all) so we get out, long enough to enjoy two lifers.

Something is rustling around in the bushes...every once in a while we get a glimpse of a flash of orange. We also spotted the awesome red eye, but this guy was too shy to give as a really good look at him. Anyways, this is enough for me to know that this is...and look at that red eye!

#312: Spotted Towhee; Red Rock Canyon Visitor Centre; December 2014
PS. How do you say towhee, anyway? Too-eee? Tau-ee? Tow-hee? I never know what's right.  (well, I couldn't wait. The internet says it's "tow-hee," like "tow truck." Important to know, because there's another one comin'!)

Not far away, in fact, just steps away, was this wonderful little bird, perched--a familiar bird, but still a beauty to see.
Western Scrub Jay
Moving along, a few hours drive and across a state line, once nestled into our temporary home in Arizona, just across the Colorado River from Nevada. Although we wouldn't be staying there long really--only a few nights total. But I went for a walk around the hood, with Matt was eager to find me all the birds he'd seen the year before. It was funny--a lot of them were almost in exactly the same place.

#313: Gambel's Quail; Bullhead City, Arizona; December 2014
The Gambel's Quail were such delight! They teeter-tottered around, almost like they had somewhere to go, and while very skittish, avoided flight at almost any cost. Inevitably they were only spotted in a large mass, and they sounded much like grouse do.

#314: Curve-Billed Thrasher; Bullhead City; December 2014
I also saw this Curve-Billed Thrasher on more than one occasion in the same tree. Actually, it felt a bit like déjà vu, every time we visited this one empty square lot diagonal from our house in Bullhead. We'd start from the road, go up a small hill, every time, there would quail on the ridge to the left, which would run across to the back side of the lot on the ride, our steps would scare a bunny under this one bush, and he'd dart in the same direction, the thrasher would be in the palm tree on the left--it happened like that every time with total predictability. It was like just pushing the reset button every time I went. Groundhog day or whatever.
Also at the corner of that lot, we spotted this cactus wren. Sadly I only saw the one, and it was quite dark, but its markings are so distinctive, it's unmistakable. I wish I had more time to observe it.

#315; Cactus Wren; Bullhead City, Arizona; December 2014
 
This is the second time I've seen the Eurasian-collared Doves. Their expansion must be happening fast. Watch, they'll be the next starling!
This mockingbird seemed to love this very inhospitable-looking tree. Again, another bird predictably perched in the same location.
Also spotted (from quite far away--this is completely cropped...I can't believe it's distinguishable at all!) was this wee little wren (looks like another rock wren, as seen at Red Rock).
At one particular house there was lots of action, all little birds. The first day I visited the yard, I was able to see the birds clearly enough but my shots weren't great. When I returned on a walk, the home owner was leaving in her car. She paused and I felt the need to explain to her what I was looking at in her tree, at which point she invited me to just go up the drive and take all the pictures I wanted! Very kind. At first, I was surprised to learn they were Verdin, since my guidebook said they are generally seen alone (but the tree was full of them). Luckily I had many opportunities to see these adorable birds!

#316: Verdin; Bullhead City; December 2014
It's at this point that I want to mention what an amazing tool ebird is when you are travelling. I did a bit of prep, looking at the guide, seeing what might come up, but there is just so much to look at and analyze in the book when realistically you are probably going to see a pretty predictable assortment of birds. But by exploring the ebird data, I could determine what birds had been reported in the area in the last few weeks, which gave me a pretty darn good idea of what I would see, and it eliminated poring over the entire field guide, looking at birds that wouldn't be there in that season or are just really rare.

Perhaps one of the birds I envied Matt most for seeing last year was the roadrunner. They are hilarious, and a bird we've all been familiar with since childhood. Run like mad, stop, put tail up, look around, run like mad, repeat.  Matt made it his personal goal to find me one. The first one was the hardest, but after that, I spotted them several times. And I squealed with delight every single time.

#317; Greater Roadrunner; Bullhead City, Arizona; December 2014


We did a little day trip to Oatman, Arizona, which is on Route 66. This little town is pretty touristy, with wild donkeys roaming the street and fake gunfights put on every day at high noon, but it's only place I managed to find the incredible Phainopepla. Seriously....is that stunning or what?

#318: Phainopepla; Oatman, Arizona; December 2014
I'm always a sucker for the animals...
 We also spotted this beauty from the car on the ride home.