Showing posts with label Rio Rico. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rio Rico. Show all posts

Sunday, September 29, 2013

Oh, The Places I Bird!

1. Cassin's Kingbird-kab Cassin’s Kingbird at Kino Springs 8-17-13

Birding can take you to some of the strangest places. Last month I went birding with Chris Rohrer as we went searching for some of the rare birds being seen in Arizona. Our main target was the Blue-footed Booby being seen at Patagonia Lake State Park, but along the way we made several other stops where seasonal birds were being seen.

2. sonoita rest area-kab Our first stop was at the Sonoita Rest area on route 82 in Sonoita. It is an eBird Hotspot due to its easy accessibility and the birds that can be found in the grasslands surrounding it. (Plus, it is the ONLY public restroom you will find out here!)

3. barn swallows-kab Behind the restrooms we found Barn Swallows and Lark Sparrows.

 

4. mountains-kab Across the street to the west we found Western Kingbirds on the wires.

 

5. grassland-kab Across the street in the grasslands we saw and heard Grasshopper Sparrows, a Target Bird for this location.

6. sparrow-kab Yes, there is a sparrow on that twig!

 

7. meadowlark-kab Closer to the road we found an Eastern Meadowlark!

8. hummingbirds at paton's-kab We stopped at Paton’s in Patagonia to count the hummingbirds…

 

9. Lazuli bunting-kab …but my Target Bird at this location was this Lazuli Bunting!

It was my first time seeing this species since moving back to Tucson a year ago.

10. Patagonia rest area-kab Our next stop and another eBird Hotspot was the Patagonia Rest Area. Thick-billed Kingbirds were reported to be here. But birding in Arizona can often turn up a different kind of bird…

11. border patrol-kabThe Border Patrol was out in force on this day. I often see them when birding in Arizona, especially if I am in a remote area near the border.

12. kingbird-kab While we were here some other birders arrived looking for the Thick-billed Kingbird. Everyone got excited when some kingbirds were spotted high in the trees. Everyone rushed over and took pictures. The three other birders that were there ticked the Thick-billed Kingbird off their lists and moved on, but Chris and I did not, because this is one of the three birds we saw and it is not a thick-billed kingbird. Initially I thought it was a Western Kingbird, because in the moment and in that light it looked like it had the white side feathers on the tail. But, after seeing my photos I have come to the conclusion this is a juvenile Cassin's Kingbird due to the white chin and dark breast with a bright yellow belly. A Thick-billed kingbird has a white throat and breast and a pale yellow wash on its under belly, but not up its breast. And, of course, it has a very thick bill!

13. swallows-kab After a stop at Patagonia Lake State Park to see and photograph the Blue-footed Booby Chris and I continued on to Kino Springs. Kino Springs is a Golf course community in southern Arizona very close to the Mexican Border. The owners kindly let birders onto the property to count birds. It is also an eBird Hotspot. Chris had never been here and I had only been here once before so it was exciting to go back again. The day had grown quite hot, but there was a cool breeze blowing here and we were seeing so many birds that soon I forgot how hot I was! The sky and the trees were full of swallows!

14. kino springs-kab Down around one of the ponds we found so many sparrows and buntings!

15. lazuli buntings-kab The grasses were full of Lazuli Buntings!

 

16. Cassin's kingbird-kab Kingbirds were being seen everywhere and I have to confess that at first I thought this was a Tropical Kingbird due to the notched tail, but after further investigation it turns out to be a Cassin's Kingbird once again. Notice the white chin and dark gray head and breast. Tropical kingbirds have a paler head and a paler yellow breast that comes all the way up to meet the throat. Wanting a bird to be a certain species doesn’t make it so. I have had to go in and correct my eBird list, but that’s okay, because accuracy is more important than getting a species on your list.

17. driving green-kab Besides the driving greens there were also sewage treatment ponds with birds in them.

18. Snowy egret-kab Our final stop was at the Rio Rico Pond in Rio Rico, AZ. This is a small farm pond alongside the road that is well known for having all kinds of rare birds show up here. One only has to park alongside Rio Rico Drive and just walk down the embankment to the fence to look for birds. There wasn’t much here today, but this Snowy Egret was a nice find. When I think back to this day it’s kind of funny to think that I went birding at two rest areas, a golf course, a sewage treatment pond and a farm pond as well as a state park. Yes, birding takes me to all kinds of strange and wonderful places, but best of all, I get to see all kinds of birds!

Places I birded on August 17, 2013 with number of species seen at each location:

  1. Sonoita Rest Area-10 species
  2. Paton’s Bird Haven-16 species
  3. Patagonia Roadside Rest Area-7 species
  4. Patagonia Lake State Park-20 species
  5. Kino Springs-45 Species
  6. Rio Rico Pond-12 species
  7. Circulo Cerro Road in Rio Rico-12 species
  8. Rio Rico Agricultural Fields-3 species (by now it was dusk)

(This does not include all the bird counts we did while driving between locations!)

Yes, it was a full day of birding and I was exhausted by the time we got home, but we had so much fun and saw so many birds, including two Life Birds for me: the Grasshopper Sparrow seen at the Sonoita Rest Area, and the Blue-footed Booby seen at Patagonia Lake State Park!

1. Blue footed booby-kab Blue-footed Booby 8-17-13

 

Links:

Wednesday, July 10, 2013

The Last and Best of All, Least Grebe

DSC_0227 San Cayetano Mountains, Rio Rico, AZ 7-7-13

Rio Rico, AZ, July 7, 2013: I left the humidity of the east coast to return to a furnace blast here in Tucson. After being gone for a month it was great to return home to my husband, my pets, and my own bed. I was barely in the door before I started filling bird feeders. There was no sign of the quail chick in the yard upon my return and I have not seen it since. I can only speculate that nature took its course, whatever that was. Though it took me a few days to readjust to being here in the desert, it didn’t take me long to start counting birds again. I submitted my first list to eBird on July 4th and haven’t missed a day since. When we had a monsoon storm on Friday, July 5th Gus and I went out to observe the flooding in the Pantano Wash. The next morning I drove to Michael Perry Park to see if there was still water in the wash but it had all subsided. Of course I brought my binoculars and camera and I ended up counting birds for an hour submitting a checklist of 21 species to eBird.

DSC_0228 Being back in Tucson after a month I needed to rest and adjust to being back and I needed to spend time with my husband. Finally on Sunday, July 7th we decided to take a drive to Rio Rico to visit our land. We have a dream of building a house there one day, but who knows if it will ever happen. Still, it is fun to dream. The heat and humidity continued to build as we drove south. Usually it is cooler in Rio Rico even though it is farther south since it is higher in elevation and farther away from the heat dome of the city, but it can also be more humid since it is closer to Mexico and the gulf moisture. As we drove up the dirt road I could feel the sun blazing down on us. We only stayed a few minutes on the side of the mountain as the temperature rose to 100 degrees Fahrenheit. I counted birds on the land and on the ride back down the road.

DSC_0232 I counted birds on Pendleton Drive where a Gray Hawk flew overhead and a Summer Tanager flew across the street in a red blur.

DSC_0257 We stopped at the Rio Rico Pond where I counted even more birds. There were birds everywhere and it seemed as if every SE Arizona specialty was revealing itself to me. Little did I know that there would be even more to see as we drove to Pena Blanca Lake southwest of Rio Rico.

DSC_0259 Storm clouds were gathering as we drove the winding road towards the mountains. Inside our car I watched the temperature drop to 84F. Sunlight broke through in patches illuminating first one peak and then another. The scenery around me was outstanding as we rounded each bend with view after view.

DSC_0267 Finally we reached Pena Blanca Lake State Park. We drove the paved road up to the upper parking lot where the reservoir opened before us. With water that lay like polished onyx between the golden hills I got out with bins and camera and started counting. A few swallows swooped over the calm water and a Western Kingbird called from a nearby tree.

DSC_0268 Behind me the thunderclouds rumbled. Off to the west I saw the lightening strike. Yet I could hear the birds calling me.

DSC_0272 My desire to explore led me farther along the trail until I came to purple-red rocky outcropping. While there were not any birds or ducks on the water, I did see a cormorant fly up and land in a distant tree. Turkey vultures flew along the ridge on dark and silent wings, naked red heads searching the slopes for something to dine on. A Gila woodpecker flew laughing over the desert scrub. I could hear birds that I could not see or identify by voice, but there were birds everywhere.

DSC_0273 With the threat of the storm I decided I’d better not go any farther down the trail. I turned and headed back to the car. I saw movement out of the corner of my eye and turned to see the slow, ponderous flight of a Great Blue Heron as it flew low over the water.

DSC_0275 We had driven in over a couple of currently dry washes. If that rain ever let lose it would not take them long to fill with water, trapping us until the water subsided. So, I jumped in the car and we started to drive out of the park, but then I saw a vermillion flycatcher on the side of the road. I jumped out to take its pictures as Gus pulled off to wait. At the top of a nearby bush I saw a red-shafted Northern Flicker. I decided to walk down the hill so I could count birds. Gus picked me up at the bottom and we drove to what is known as the Upper Thumb picnic area. I figured I could just take a quick look around and then we could leave. As soon as I opened the car door that idea flew the coop! There were birds, birds and more birds! I didn’t know where to look first!

DSC_0286 Vermillion flycatchers flitted from branch to branch. Bewicks Wrens scolded from the brush. A Rufous-crowned sparrow jumped up on a low branch, then disappeared before I could get my camera focused.

DSC_0282 A thrasher sat in a treetop. In the cove below I saw coots paddling around. Then, in another tree a male Vermillion flycatcher was joined by a male hooded oriole! I whirled and twirled trying to see all the birds, but in my mind there was one bird I was in search of. It was the object of my desire and the main reason I wanted to take this drive. I had little hope of actually finding it, but I had to try.

The Upper Thumb picnic area is on a ridge that projects into the reservoir with a cove on either side. From my lofty perch I had already examined the cove on my right as I faced the lake. Now I walked over to the left side to scan the cove below near the Lower Thumb picnic area. As I glanced down through the trees I could see little patches of the cove where on the opposite shore I saw some people walking along a trail. Then, suddenly, in the middle of the cove I saw something different.

DSC_0301 I looked between the leafy green of tree branches to the open water where a small, dark bird paddled in the water. The head was a different shape from a coot and the body smaller. The overall appearance was dark charcoal gray and there was no white beak.

DSC_0303 A quick look through my binoculars revealed a small grebe’s body, but this one was not a pied-billed grebe, it was a Least Grebe! The least grebe would be the last grebe I needed to have all the North American grebes on my Life List. I raised my camera to my shoulder and snapped away as the bird slowly paddled out of view. Quickly I ran to the car calling Gus to hurry up. We needed to drive back down to the Lower Thumb Picnic Area. I needed to get a better view and a better shot of this bird!

DSC_0307 I no longer cared about the rain or the flash flooding. While the thunder continued to rumble I jumped from the car and hurried down the path. A few rain drops spattered my face as I continued down the trail. A blue grosbeak fluttered up on a reed as I hurried by. I stopped to snap a quick picture. Then a whole flock of buntings and finches fluttered out of the reeds. I took a quick look but made myself turn away and continue down the path.

DSC_0308 Finally the cove was in view, but there was no little charcoal gray bird. I scanned the shoreline, but only found a Black Phoebe. I scanned the reeds. I scanned the middle of the cove and the floating log where I saw it last. No bird. I thought maybe it paddled out of this cove and headed for open water, so I followed the path along the curve of the ridge above me where just a few moments before I had been looking down. Nothing. Finally I my conscience kicked in and I started to feel guilty for leaving Gus standing at the edge of the first cove. I turned around and headed back.

DSC_0310 As I rounded the corner and the Lower Thumb cove came into view there it was! I have no idea where it was hiding, but there was my bird! I snapped, snapped, snapped away.

DSC_0311 

DSC_0313 

DSC_0329 In-between shots I just gazed through my bins looking at this sweet little bird. “Life Bird!” I kept saying to myself, “I have all the grebes!” I was so excited! I wanted to share this excitement with someone who “got it.” “Gus, do you realize how exciting this is?” I asked him as he gazed down at his smart phone. “Yup,” he said, still looking down. Oh well. Inside I was jumping for joy. All the grebes! I do not think I have any other family group completed. I was thrilled. And it was time to go.

DSC_0351 I caught up with Gus and we walked back to the car. On the way we passed the reedy patch at the end of the cove with all the buntings and finches. This time I did stop to identify the Lesser Goldfinches and Varied Buntings that clung to reeds and grasses. Varied Buntings?

DSC_0360 I thought to myself! Wow, that is just the icing on the cake. I couldn’t ask for more. I decided then and there, that I am in love with Pena Blanca Lake. It is both beautiful and birdy and it gave me my last, but certainly not least, Least Grebe!

DSC_0347

Notes from my nest: Yes, I am home and I have over a thousand photos to go through. I hope to show you birds and tell you stories from the Northeast as well as keep up with all that is going on here in Tucson. Chris Rohrer came over to visit on Monday and we just sat inside and chatted. The heat is so intense right now that it makes it hard to get out, but, it will not stop us from chasing more birds! We have plans for later this week. I will let you know how THAT turns out! Meanwhile the monsoon has started and the storms keep rolling in! See you all soon!

Monday, February 11, 2013

Big January Birding in Santa Cruz County

1. Hammonds fly-kab Hammond’s Flycatcher 1-13-13

On January 13 Chris Rohrer and I headed south to Santa Cruz County to see what we could find as we continued our Big January count.

2. amado pond-kab We started the day at the Amado Sewage Pond right off I-19 where we found 2 Lesser Scaup in with all the ring-necked ducks, ruddy ducks, and mallards.

 

3. WCsp-kab Our next stop was in Tubac for coffee and breakfast. Our plans were to head south to the Tumacacori Mission next but we decided to give the Santa Cruz County Park in Tubac a try. I had only been here one time before when I lived here over 3 years ago. You have to drive down through Tubac to get to it and as soon as we turned onto the dirt road leading to the park we started to see birds! I rolled down the windows and slowed the car down as we watched and photographed birds out the windows, using the car as a blind.

4. verdin-kab Once we entered the parking lot we got out and wandered around the park where we found flycatchers, verdin and sparrows.

5. swamp sp-kab We discovered a fenced-off wetlands area to the south and found a swamp sparrow sitting on the fence! This was a real treat to see and add to our list. Later when I entered the count into eBird I discovered this was an eBird Hotspot and they have it labeled as Robert Morris Park.

6. bridled tit-kab After circling the park we walked back out onto the dirt road where we found Bridled Titmice…

7. nofl-kab …and a pair of Northern Flickers!

 

8. rwsp-kab Our next stop was the Tumacacori NHP where we found a small flock of Rufous-winged sparrows in the hedgerows out back.

 

9. ocwa-kab An Orange-crowned warbler fed among weeds in the courtyard.

 

10. noca-kab A northern Cardinal sipped from the rivulet flowing from the fountain.

 

11. lasp-kab This Lark Sparrow was much bolder and flew right up to the fountain to drink!

A half mile south of the mission on the frontage road is another eBird Hotspot. It is called St. Gertrudis Lane and you must park in the dirt parking area and walk in on the dirt road as it is a private road. But, it leads to the Santa Cruz River and the De Anza Trail. Many good birds are seen along this road but we did not see too many today.

12. nomo-kab However, we did find a Northern Mockingbird!

 

13. buckthorn-kab The road was lined with bright pyracantha bushes.

 

14. abto-kab While in the duff below the Abert’s Towhees fed!

 

15. feha-kab We followed the frontage road south and found this Ferruginous Hawk on a pole near the Rio Rico Agricultural fields. We stopped and took several pictures but I could not get in a position where the wires were not cutting across the bird’s face.

16. feha in tree-kab The hawk soon tired of our observations and flew further south into a tree. When I entered this species into eBird I discovered it was unusual to see it in this area. Thankfully both Chris and I had good photos as documentation and the record was accepted!

 

17. lesa-kab In the flooded fields near the Rio Rico Ponds we found Least Sandpipers.

 

18. merlin-kab But the best bird of the day was this Merlin I spotted atop a tall tree along Pendleton Road. Chris had been searching for a Merlin for months and it had always eluded him. Now here it was in all its glory and he was able to get wonderful pictures! I pulled the car off the road and snapped a few myself!

We ended the day at Pena Blanca Lake. By now the sun had set and the shadows were long and deep. Not the best for photography and we did not stay long, but the beauty of that place made us make a promise to ourselves that we would return and explore it again another day. It was a full day of birding in Santa Cruz County but well worth the time and effort!