Working a 7am-4pm job can be hard on a fellow's birding, especially when the sun sets early and there's still prep work to be done for the following day's grind. It's often a tight, sweaty squeeze--like to many suits on an elevator--but the weekend outlet isn't always enough, and sometimes you've got to fit in some weekday birding, even if it's just a quick fix, a supplementary high. It doesn't matter if they're mostly trash birds; they've got feathers and they move, so it's still birding.
Black Phoebe by the parking lot irrigation gate? Hell yeah!!! |
Many people have the benefit of yard birding of course, but for us apartment dwellers that doesn't amount to much, so the next option is finding a local patch around home or work, usually a park or something similar. Phoenix has some decent birding parks, like Encanto downtown or Grenada Park more central, but these require a bit too much rush hour driving for me to hit up on a weekday evening. The campus where I work has actually turned up a couple of decent birds for me--American Robin and Peregrine Falcon, and Lark Sparrow, which are uncommon in central Phoenix--but I can't well use my place of work as my work patch; that'd be distracting for me and everyone else there who knows me and sees me walking the grounds with all the gear, plus there's not much water.
So, I decided to head a few blocks northeast to the SRP Arizona Falls canal spillway, a nice little attempt at a canal filtration/regulation gate with some walking paths and water works. It's very small--easily covered in 10 minutes--and also adjacent to Herberger park, which has some grass and a few pine trees, as well as tamarisks, that have already produced Red-naped Sapsuckers and maybe some migrants in a month.
Like the other park birding scenes in Phoenix, the lessened variety compared to proper nature preserves or refuges is made up for, in small part, by much closer looks at those species that will still abide the heat and noise, and now peeping tom birders, of the city.
At any preserve in Maricopa County, Wigeon are pretty near the bottom of the totem pole in terms of commonality and appearance among waterfowl, but along a canal, man, they're hot commodities!
A Neotropic Cormorant is a bird I will not stop to observe at during my weekend treks at Tres Rios, where they numbers in the 100s as can the site species count on a good day, but it's another solid find for a little patch in central Phoenix.
So, finding the little birding patch by work helps not only to satisfy that birding addiction--and really, satisfy is a generous word--it helps to numb expectations and encourage an appreciation of what would be considered lesser or duller birds in more grandiose birding settings. And hey, who knows when something rare will turn up? In the mean time, for even 20 minutes on a Tuesday, being a few feet from a feeding Anna's will do just fine.
Nice. I just added Crested Caracara to my hospital list today. Best bird there was an Anna's last winter. Also had nesting Scissor-taileds and Western Kingbirds.
ReplyDeleteRight on Nate,
DeleteOf course the standards are different in your region, but having Caracara on a work patch list sounds pretty awesome, same with scissor-taileds. Those be some fairly common regional specialties that are much better than most other common regional specialties.
I'll hope to pick up some Kingbirds later this spring, along with Nighthawks, some Swallow sp. and maybe a couple migrant Warblers--Townsend's and Hermit if lucky.
The best I think this spot could turn up is a Yellow-bellied Sapsucker on the couple of pines. We'll see.
Best of luck at your patch.
I'm still trying to figure out my new patch. I moved away from my old patch, the Newark Reservoir. I'm thinking about making the entire University of Delaware my new patch. There's a small retention pond at the extreme south end of campus, a farm, and plenty of small pockets of trees and fruiting bushes.
ReplyDeleteClaiming a University as your local patch is pretty gutsy Tim, but it sounds like a pretty diverse place--I bet you'll pull in plenty (and have already).
DeleteI guess it's good your studies and work and relating to birds, because if I could bird directly where I worked, and wasn't supposed to be...my job performance would suffer.
Cheers Tim, thanks for stopping by.
I use my campus as a patch list. And it's pretty exciting finding the various birds....I've had a Golden Eagle....Zone-tailed Hawk....yearly nesting Great Horned Owls. The only problem? Getting the opportunity to get outdoors to do it. Work keeps one busy:)
ReplyDeleteWork is the worst...
DeleteOn the plus side, it sounds like you work at a pretty pretty place with pretty pretty birds : )
The list at the school where I teach is stuck at 50, haven't added any in 2 years. But I saw my lifer Prairie Falcon and Elf Owls there as well as a Snow Goose, Burrowing Owls, and Mountain Bluebirds. The one that got away was a glimpse at a flying gull, darn! Good luck on your new patch!
ReplyDeleteHa! 50 seems like a heavy number at which to be stuck, but it sounds like you've had some really solid stuff there Jeremy, and I doubt my little patch will ever break 40!
DeleteThanks for stopping by it's great to hear from you again.
Cool! I've been doing some "patchwork" at my office too over the last 4 years or so. I've been stuck at 79 forever it seems, but just added Am. Goldfinch (how had I not seen that before?) and Wilson's Snipe. Finally I crossed over 80. I'm pretty lucky, though, I think. There's a good sized pond in front of my parking lot and a park behind it, so I get to visit a few different habitats when I bird around my office.
ReplyDeleteSounds like it Scott! 80 species for a work patch is fantastic, and I know you've gotten some great photos as well : )
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