The birds and birding travels of June and Peter.



Curlew Sandpiper
Little Owls were easy to see and it was good to find our local Barn Owl roosting in a favourite ruin. Nearby a male Blue Rock Thrush was at a regular site but a pair of Cirl Buntings in the same area were unusual.
The day's raptors were a Common Kestrel, a male Montagu's Harrier and a pair of Marsh Harriers.
In total we saw about 60 species, most of them from the car.

Boothill, Tombstone
Paton's yard The highlight of our morning in Madera Canyon was Mr Flame or Flameboy (whichever you prefer), the returning male Flame-colored Tanager that is a frequent and regular visitor to the feeders at the Kubo gift shop. Constantly vocal, this bird would have been truly hard to miss! Presumably he was still hoping to find a mate of the same species!
Flameboy
The Arivaca Cienaga section of the Buenos Aires National Wildlife Refuge provided us with a very pleasant afternoon's birding as always. By now there was also increasing interest amongst the birders in the frogs and many lizards that we were seeing. Once again it was hot!
Bullfrog
The next day we got religion! We began with an early morning visit to the Valley Presbyterian Church in Green Valley but this was to see the Great Horned Owls that nest there every year. The young had just fledged and one was half-hidden in a small tree just a few yards from the nest site. An adult was roosting nearby and keeping an eye on us. This was followed by a short diversion off the interstate to see the impressive San Xavier del Bac Mission, a historic Spanish Catholic mission located on the Tohono O'odham Indian Reservation. No birds to see here – this was purely a tourism interlude!
San Xavier del Bac Mission
On the way north through Tucson we called at Sweetwater Wetlands, a site that seldom disappoints. Most of the winter ducks had gone and there were only a few shorebirds but it was worth the visit for the Harris's Hawks and at last a co-operative Abert's Towhee. We also enjoyed seeing the many Zebra-tailed Lizards.
Zebra-tailed Lizard
There was more tourism to come with an overnight stay in Sedona described by some as the most beautiful town in the USA. It was here that one of our group dubbed the USA as 'The Land of the Fee' and it is true that few chances are missed to extract money from visitors to the Red Rock Country.


California Condor
Cactus Wren
Red-tailed Hawk
From Tucson we drove to Portal on the east side of the Chiricahua Mountains. A stop on the way there at Willcox Twin Lakes produced an excellent selection of ducks and shorebirds plus Eared Grebes, Horned Lark, Black-crowned Night Heron and, surprisingly, a Least Tern.
American Avocet
Everyone we have taken to Portal over the years remembers this little town as one of the main highlights of the tour. It really is a special place. Where else can you find four species of owls nesting within a few yards of the main street and half a dozen gardens along the same street that have bird feeders attracting such colourful gems as Lazuli Buntings, Baltimore, Hooded & Scott's Orioles, Black-headed Grosbeaks, Acorn Woodpeckers and many more?
And we always stay at the splendid Portal Peak Lodge, owned and managed by the Webster family
Of course, finding Portal's owls requires local help and we quickly hooked up with our old friend Dave Jasper for an evening 'owl prowl'. The birds weren't maybe as co-operative as we would have liked but we finished up having good views of Elf, Western & Whiskered Screech Owls but only heard Great Horned Owl, Common Poorwill and Whip-poor-will.
Next morning we had a quick pre-breakfast visit with Dave to Rodeo, New Mexico that produced Scaled Quail, Greater Roadrunner, Inca Dove, Loggerhead Shrike and Bendire's Thrasher. Later we visited what Dave calls his 'office', the South Fork of Cave Creek Canyon where, much to our relief, Elegant Trogon was seen really well. It was a day during which we saw 85 species and yet we spent quite a while during the hottest part of the afternoon just sitting at the feeders at Cave Creek Ranch.
Arizona Woodpecker
Cliff Chipmunk
The following day was centred on a trip out to the nearby 'town' of Paradise and Jackie Lewis's feeders at the George Walker House, a reliable place to see Juniper Titmouse amongst many other species. In the silver mining days Paradise had a population of about 1500 but now has only about a dozen full-time residents. George Walker built his house in 1902 during the town's heyday. The book 'A Portal to Paradise' by Alden Hayes gives an interesting account of the history of the area. Not too far from Paradise we were pleased to find a low-elevation Mexican Chickadee.
That takes us almost halfway through the tour - more to follow...
Laughing Gulls
Royal Tern
"Great White Heron"
American Oystercatcher
Whooping Cranes

Black Skimmer
Rose-breasted Grosbeak
We had four full days in the valley, based at the Alamo Inn. During this time we managed to fit in visits to four sites that form part of the World Birding Center network: Bentsen-Rio Grande State Park, Edinburg Scenic Wetlands, Estero Llano Grande State Park and South Padre Island. One has to admire the effort that has been made in recent years to promote birding tourism in this area and to develop some excellent sites and facilities, but really the name World Birding Center is more than a little irritating and could only have been invented in Texas! Other sites visited during this time were Santa Ana NWR, Laguna Atascosa NWR, Frontera Audubon Thicket, Falcon State Park and Salineňo and there are plenty more that we could have gone to if there had been time. Many of the special birds of the area such as Great Kiskadee, Green Jay, Plain Chachalaca, Altamira Oriole, Green Kingfisher and Buff-bellied Hummingbird are not difficult to find but there was no sign this time of Brown Jays or Red-billed Pigeons and, following negative reports from Brownsville, we didn't even go looking for Tamaulipas Crow.
Altamira Oriole
Most of our second week in Texas was spent based near High Island, one of the best-known birding areas in the USA. We stopped on the way there at Brazos Bend State Park, south-west of Houston and it was here that we saw for the first time the destruction caused last September by Hurricane Ike. However, this was just the start and later, particularly along the Bolivar Peninsula, we saw much worse. It is reported that nearly 4000 buildings were destroyed along the peninsula in towns such as Gilchrist and Crystal Beach. Birding in familiar places like Rollover Pass and Yacht Basin Road knowing that so many people had lost their homes and some lost their lives really wasn't a comfortable experience.

Brazos Bend State Park
Rollover Pass
Of course, we were at High Island for the spring migration with our main attention focused on Boy Scout Woods and Smiths Oaks, two of the woodland sanctuaries owned by Houston Audubon Society that in the right weather conditions can attract an enormous number and variety of migrant warblers, vireos, flycatchers, etc. Unfortunately, this year they also attracted an unusually high density of mosquitoes making birding almost impossible in places. Still we saw plenty of birds including gems such as Blackpoll, Blackburnian, Cape May, Magnolia, Chestnut-sided, Bay-breasted, Hooded and Nashville Warblers, Northern Waterthrush, American Redstart and Northern Parula. Surely these warblers are one of the world's most attractive groups of birds! April 28th was the our best day with a sizeable fallout of birds occurring as a result of an overnight storm that brought flooding to parts of Houston.
Blackburnian Warbler

High Island patches are highly prized and have become collectibles over the years among visiting birders
Some of the other well-known birding sites in the area such as Anahuac NWR and Bolivar Flats have suffered severe damage from the hurricane and may never be the same again, but in some ways it is quite reassuring to see the migrants, shorebirds as well as passerines, still managing to use these places in spite of the havoc.
We were also very pleased to find that the Gulfway Motel in High Island had re-opened for business and it was good to see old friends Helen and Becky and enjoy several excellent breakfasts there.
Gulfway Motel, High Island
This was Peter's eighth spring in Texas. We are looking forward to returning in April 2010.