Tuesday, April 19, 2022

The Dream Finally Realized, Part 1

4/19/22 

Becky and Michael from Connecticut finally made it down to South Texas after years of having to postpone the trip (and it didn’t include just south Texas, but almost all of Texas, plus southeast Arizona), and were so happy to get here and really indulge their photographic passions!  They had already spent a week out at South Padre (I actually ran into her the day I went out there filming), and were booked to spend an entire month here at the Inn, so they wanted to focus on places they probably wouldn’t know to go to on their own.  So today we headed up to Brushline Road to bag one of her dream birds – the Scissor-tailed Flycatcher (after logging one of our nesting Lesser Nighthawks at the Inn)!

Thankfully it was overcast the whole morning (and it even dripped a little) as that saved us from driving into the sun at one point, but the soft light still made for decent photography for the most part.  The first subject we came across was a Couch’s Kingbird, but he was against the sky so ended up being “proof shot” material.  But the next subject was more cooperative:  a male Ladder-backed Woodpecker on a power pole!  A pair of Golden-fronted Woodpeckers also plastered themselves on another pole, but I think they unplastered themselves before Michael could get off a shot (which wasn’t too disappointing as they apparently had gotten great shots at Sheepshead on the Island)!  A little evidence of migration revealed itself in a handful of male Baltimore Orioles that we came across, and a singing Long-billed Thrasher made photography challenging in that he was behind a bunch of mesquite leaves, but we got ‘im!  I heard a Painted Bunting singing, and a little green bird (undoubtedly a young male) did shoot in to the bush next to us, but unfortunately Becky didn’t even see him until he flew… L  Kiskadees were all over, but since that was the first bird they had upon arrival, they already had plenty of shots!


Ladder-backed Woodpecker
 
Hiding Long-billed Thrasher

Baltimore Oriole

Before long a pair of Scissortails went darting over the car and landed on the wire behind us, so we all piled out, and Becky dragged out her tripod to steady her own monster (read: heavy) camera, and got some decent shots.  We heard a lot of stuff that was too far back to try and pull out (Verdin, Bewick’s Wrens, etc.), but as we turned the corner onto Ken Baker, a Pyrrhuloxia was singing close by, and we were able to spot him!  (I think it was here we heard a cooing Roadrunner in the distance…)  In a more open area we were focused on something out in the field when Becky spotted a little guy right on the fence next to us – a knockout Lark Sparrow!  He sat for the longest time as we all fired off pictures, while something I couldn’t quite place was singing behind us.  As we started up again, suddenly a Black-throated Sparrow darted in to the fence on my side, only he didn’t stick around for pictures… L  An Eastern Wood Pewee was tuning up during all of this, but didn’t come out to play…  Somewhere in here while we were out of the car, Michael made mention of the pretty purple flowers along the road, so I thought I’d use my “Seek” app to find out what they were – it’s set up to automatically take the picture once the program ID’s the object, and I had barely opened the thing up before it snapped a picture – they were Silverleaf Nightshades!

 
Our first Scissor-tailed Flycatcher

Becky and her Monster (Michael is on the right 😁)

Ken Baker Road

Silver Leaf Nightshade

Lark Sparrow

Our first Pyrrhuloxia

It wasn’t too long after this (or maybe it was before – I forget) that the show really started:  we came upon a family of Scissortails that was just performing and interacting like crazy!  I heard Becky’s camera go off during the height of the “air show” and was hoping she was able to catch it, and she did!  We also had better looks at Couch’s Kingbird, plus a Brown-crested Flycatcher that snuck in and took his place on the fence, and even a herd of Turkeys off the road!  One of the kingbirds went after a Caracara, and in the raptor department we had a pair of uncooperative Harris’ Hawks (that spooked a covey of Bobwhite when one of them took off), a couple of fly-by Swainson’s, and a reeely high White-tailed!  But another highlight was a Pyrrhuloxia that decided to land right over our heads on a wire, and gave us a little concert, providing comedy relief with his “bad hair day”! J  Our last new bird before having to head back was a Bronzed Cowbird, a little more exciting than the dozens of Brown-headeds we had seen along the wires…  We had heard a Common Ground Dove earlier, but then almost ran one down going down Rio Beef Road!

 
Michael and Becky at work...

Frolicking Scissor-tailed Flycatchers 
(©2022 Becky Miller)

Young Scissor-tailed Flycatcher

Couch's Kingbird

Brown-crested Flycatcher

Pyrrhuloxia having a Bad Hair Day

Bronzed Cowbird

We wound up with 40 species for the morning, which is modest, but not totally unexpected for a stroll along a back road in the South Texas Brushlands (but added our only water bird, a flyby Black-necked Stilt, on the way home)!  Bird list:

Northern Bobwhite

Wild Turkey

Eurasian Collared-Dove

Common Ground Dove

Mourning Dove

Greater Roadrunner

Lesser Nighthawk

Black-necked Stilt

Turkey Vulture

Harris's Hawk

White-tailed Hawk

Swainson's Hawk

Golden-fronted Woodpecker

Ladder-backed Woodpecker

Crested Caracara

Eastern Wood-Pewee

Brown-crested Flycatcher

Great Kiskadee

Couch's Kingbird

Scissor-tailed Flycatcher

White-eyed Vireo

Green Jay

Black-crested Titmouse

Verdin

Barn Swallow

Bewick's Wren

Long-billed Thrasher

Northern Mockingbird

House Sparrow

Olive Sparrow

Black-throated Sparrow

Lark Sparrow

Baltimore Oriole

Bronzed Cowbird

Brown-headed Cowbird

Great-tailed Grackle

Northern Cardinal

Pyrrhuloxia

Painted Bunting

Dickcissel

 

2 comments:

  1. Mary Beth, thank you for an amazing, exciting day! We are looking forward to going out with you again this Thursday! Becky

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