Showing posts with label Curlews. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Curlews. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 6, 2013

At the End of the Day in Willcox

1. Lake Cochise-kab Lake Cochise in Willcox, AZ 1-3-2013

The clouds continued to roll in and the wind continued to pick up as Chris and I headed north through the Sulphur Springs Valley and Kansas Settlement. Flat grassy fields spread in all directions as we kept our eyes open for raptors on utility poles and longspurs or pipits in the grass.

2. faria dairy pond-kab  A quick stop at the Faria Dairy Pond along Kansas settlement Road gave us a few more species, including our first Common Mergansers for Cochise County, though we had seen this species on the first day of January at Reid Park.

3. FEHA-kab Just a bit farther up the road we spotted our first Ferruginous Hawk!

The Flatlands of Kansas Settlement soon gave way to low rolling hills as we neared Willcox. Our destination was Lake Cochise, a place Chris had never been before. It’s an odd place, kind of out of the way, and it doesn’t look like you will find much there as you drive down the gravel road past a chain link fenced Border Patrol Station and abandoned farms and then Twin Lakes Golf Course. As you pass through a brick and stucco monument you usually start to see sparrows and meadowlarks alongside the road. But not today. It was just too windy! Then, as you drive up a little rise you can finally see the lake with the mountains beyond and you realize that you have entered another world.

4. duck blind-kab The silver water of Lake Cochise was being whipped into whitecaps on this blustery day in January. By now it was 3:45 PM and so cold! The wind was gusting so hard that it made it difficult to stand up and hold your camera steady. Wind whipped tears into our eyes and froze our cheeks. I put on every last bit of clothing I could find. I zipped up my coat over all my shirts and sweaters, put on my headband, pulled up my hood, and donned my gloves! Oh My goodness! What was I doing here, I asked myself! But then we turned the corner and I saw these birds…

5. curlews-kab What were they? Surely they weren’t geese or ducks or herons. My brain was racing to put a name to the birds I was seeing, and then it dawned on me…I have seen these before!

6. curlews-kab I saw them just last month in California near the Salton Sea, but I have never seen this species in Arizona. Were my tired eyes playing tricks on me? NO! These are Long-billed curlews!

7. curlews-kab As the wind beat and battered us Chris and I tried to get closer for better shots.

 

8. curlews-kab The Curlews were gathered in a flock of about 120 birds along a sandbar that stretched out into the middle of the lake. Many of them had their long bills tucked into their feathers to keep warm, but now and then a few did poke their heads out and we got a good look at those magnificent bills!

9. Sandhill cranes-kab Beyond the lake Sandhill Cranes flew over the open range.

 

10. light-kab As the sun sank lower and lower it painted our surroundings with light.

 

11. pink-kab Off to the east the Dos Cabezas Mountains were splashed with pink.

 

12. dos cabezos-kab Here you can see the two heads for which Dos Cabezas is named!

 

13. hunkered down-kab As the sun sank lower and the curlews hunkered down, we knew our birding day was over. I shook my head as I realized this was only Day Three of our Big January and I just knew that today’s excursion was going to add big numbers to our big list! Now it was time for a warm place with warm food. Then we needed to get home and go to bed because we already had plans to get up again the next morning and go birding at Florida and Madera Canyons!

14. sunset-kab

Big January 

(Click this link to read all posts related to this subject)

DSC_0211-kab Long-billed Curlews at Lake Cochise in Willcox, AZ 1-3-2013

Lake Cochise Bird List for January 3, 2013:

  1. Snow Goose-1
  2. Northern Shoveler-30
  3. Common Merganser-2
  4. Ruddy Duck-6
  5. Northern harrier-1
  6. American Coot-50
  7. Sandhill Crane-2000
  8. Long-billed Curlew-120

Notes: Total birding time: 30 minutes. Distance 1 mile. Temperature 37F, cloudy, with high gusty winds!

Saturday, December 22, 2012

A Sky Full of Birds (and why they flew)

1. Flying egrets-kab Cattle Egrets 11-23-12 near the Salton Sea

On the Friday after Thanksgiving when so many people are at the store shopping I am standing at the edge of an agricultural field in the Imperial Valley of California near the southeast corner of the Salton Sea. My husband has brought me here as a special treat to see birds and I am not disappointed! We found a field full of egrets, ibises and curlews, and as I stood watching they all suddenly took wing and filled the sky!

2. lift off-kab A sky full of birds

 

3. flight-kab 

4. cattle egret-kab Cattle Egret in flight

 

5. why the sky-kab So, why did they fly?

 

6. peregrine-kabBecause a juvenile Peregrine Falcon is swooping over the field of birds!

 

7. sky full of birds-kab 

8. egrets and ibis-kab Cattle Egrets and ibis.

 

9. peregrine-kab The young Peregrine made another pass but never caught a bird.

 

10. circling-kab The birds circled around, then settle down once again.

 

Thursday, December 20, 2012

A Flurry of Birds

1. CAEG-kab Cattle Egrets take wing near the Salton Sea-11-23-12

Gus and I now headed back to the main road on our way to our next birding hotspot along the eastern edge of the Salton Sea. We were headed north on Gentry Road when we came to a big curve with lush green agricultural fields all around.

2. birds in road-kab In the middle of the road a pair of Cattle Egrets scurried to the side…

 

3. run-kab…just as a car rounded the bend!

 

4. into the field-kab Gus pulled off the road and I jumped out to count and photograph birds!

 

5. safety-kab Egrets and Ibises all fed together.

 

6. feeding-kab Cattle Egrets are smaller than Snowy Egrets or Great Egrets. They have short yellow bills and black legs, and their legs and necks are shorter than the other two species. In breeding plumage the their legs turn pinkish red and they develop rusty patches on their heads, and breasts. Unlike the other egrets, these birds favor open fields where they can follow tractors or cattle and eat the insects kicked up by their movements. Cattle Egrets are native to Africa and did not arrive in North America until the 1940’s to 1950’s after first migrating to South America. They are found mostly along the lower half of the United States from coast to coast.

6. on the lookout-kab Cattle Egret standing watch.

 

7. exploring-kab Cattle Egret exploring

 

8. taking wing-kab Cattle Egret Flying

 

9. resettling-kab As I stood watching the birds I would see them rise and resettle over and over again.

10. feeding together-kab Long-billed Curlews and Cattle Egrets in Agricultural fields near the Salton Sea

 

11. egrets n curlews-kab Feeding together

 

12. rise-kab Rise…

 

13. land-kab…and resettle

 

14. cattle egret-kab Cattle Egret

 

15. Ibis-kab White-faced Ibis

 

16. curlew-kab Cattle Egrets and Curlew

 

17. curlews n egrets-kab Why did they fly?

 

18. sky full of birds-kab A sky full of birds 11-23-12

But why did they fly?

Come back to find out why on December 22nd!

Monday, December 10, 2012

In Search of the Salton Sea

DSC_0096 Bannister Road loooking east-kab Bannister Road 11-22-12 south of the Salton Sea

It is late on Thanksgiving Day when Gus and I step out of our hotel in Brawley, CA.
We are on an adventure to the Salton Sea and after a bland turkey dinner in a local hotel we went back to our room to rest. Gus fell asleep while I read through my camera's manual trying to learn what I could to improve my photography skills. I have been very frustrated with my photos lately.  When we go out our hotel door I am shocked to see the sun sinking low and blackbirds gathering in the trees. When the blackbirds gather you know that sunset is not far behind!  Knowing that time is short, we head northwest past Westmoreland and towards the Sonny Bono Salton Sea National Wildlife Refuge. I could see on my GSP map that it is at the north end of Vendel road, so we turn right and stop short. There is no signage here and the road is dirt. This is a problem because we are driving in Gus' new all black Camaro convertible. He bought the convertible when we moved back to Arizona this year. My part of that deal is that he gets to drive me to new birding locations! Plus, he also bought me a new spotting scope which we are both eager to try out on this trip! In fact, we waited for the arrival of the scope before we could leave. When it finally arrived on Wednesday we booked our hotels, packed our bags and were out the door and on our way! Now here we are trying to get to the Salton Sea and unsure of how to get there!

2. DSC_0084 golden rows-kab Golden Rows

Gus really wants me to have a good time, so he reluctantly starts to head north on the washboard road. The car bumps along slowly as we try to raise as little dust as possible. Of course we have the top down! It sure makes it easy to see birds this way! Around us the low light of the sinking sun is casting a golden glow over the agricultural fields we are driving past. The harrowed rows are casting deep shadows creating interesting patterns as we drive by. The whole world seems like a golden place full of promise.

3. DSC_0097 Bannister road-kab

When we get to a paved crossroad called Bannister Road Gus turns east not wanting to proceed any further on the dirt road. We have seen no signage for the Wildlife Refuge and I am starting to wonder if it is one of those “Off Limits” bird areas where only the birds and the wildlife biologists are allowed. As we head east on Bannister Road I am consulting my Google maps again to find a way to the sea. Part of the problem has been that when I put in a search for directions to the Wildlife Refuge it comes back with results that say, "route not found." So, I am having to figure this out by myself! I am thinking I should have done more research before but it looks so easy and so accessible on the map!

As we are driving east and I am looking down at my dumb smart phone Gus slows the car and says, did you see that bird? I look up to see a kestrel on the wires. I explain what we are looking at. He says no, that one. Then he points out the larger bird on the cross bar of a utility pole! When the kestrel starts to attack the huge raptor it takes off and flies west. Gus then puts the car in reverse and backs up to the spot where the bird has landed again. However, the kestrel has followed as well and the raptor is being dive-bombed by the kestrel once again. Apparently it does not like the kestrel or me looking at it, so it takes off and flies straight into the sun and is lost to my view. It was so large that I think it is an eagle, but I am unsure. It's markings make me think it is a juvenile golden or bald eagle since there was splotchy white in its wings.

4. DSC_0085 field full of birds-kab

With the eagle gone I now glance around me at the agricultural fields to the north. At first my eye is drawn to the 10 Great white egrets in the field which stand out like white sails against the dark green crops, but then, as I look through my bins I am astonished to see curlews!

5. DSC_0086 egrets n curlews-kab I haven't seen a curlew in years, but here they are with long curved bills as long as their long legs, searching in the grasses for something to eat. I start to count, 1, 2, 3...up to 10 birds! Ten curlews! I have never seen more than one or two at a time, yet here are ten!

6. DSC_0087 curlew-kab As I am looking at curlews I am listening to western meadowlarks sing. Their liquid notes flow over my body in a soothing sweetness. I disappear inside their song as I stand in the dust on the side of the road.

DSC_0094 Ibis-kab My reverie is broken when three dark bird lift off and fly with long curved bills and trailing legs. I recognize their silhouettes as ibises!  I watch them fly, their bodies curved, their legs trailing behind, like crooked old witches flying across the sky! I smile to see them, then return to search the field where I find a killdeer hunkered down between the rows.

DSC_0093 Ibis-kab The sun hovers briefly on the horizon, then slips below and is gone. There is no time to drive anywhere now. It will soon be dark. So Gus heads west back toward Vendel Road and Route 78. I think we are going back, but he surprises me and we turn north onto yet another dirt road between the fields onto Brouchard Road. Here we thump along slowly past the egrets and hay stacks. Suddenly a great cloud of brown birds flies up and over our heads and I am seeing over 100 curlews in flight! It's a good thing the summer is over or I would be catching flies in my wide open mouth! I am truly astonished!

9. DSC_0101 Curlews Evening Curlews in flight near the Salton Sea

We continue our drive north to Walker Road where we turn west again. I can see the Salton Sea as a thin blue shimmer on the horizon. It is so close! Why can't I get there? We finally see the first sign from the refuge. It is a small blue and white sign designating this corner as a boundary to the refuge but it says "This area closed to public." So we drive west to Baker road where we find yet another sign telling us the same thing! Discouraged, we turn south on Baker Road where we drive past bee hives and hay stacks and a line of tall salt cedars growing along the edge. How can we be so close yet so far away? When we hit Bannister Road again we turn west and head for route 78/86. As we come to the point where Vendel Road crosses Bannister we stop to measure the distance we have travelled. As we do, I suddenly see a huge brown sign saying, "Sonny Bono Salton Sea National Wildlife Refuge 2 miles!" We can't believe it! We drive past Vendel road and turn around so we are now facing east. There on the west side of the intersection is another sign with the same information! if we had just gone straight across Bannister Road on Vendel Road as I had wanted to it would have only been 2 miles to the refuge! But there was no sign on Vendel Road heading north. The only signs were on Bannister Road coming from the east or the west! By now it was dark so we did not drive down the dirt road. Instead, we head for Rt. 78 with the top down and the wind in our hair!

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