Maricopa County has its various birdy attractions throughout the year. Certain thrashers and sparrows come to mind in winter, while Cuckoos, Bitterns, and Rails tend to captivate the later summer interest. But as April runs into May, there's only one place to be in Maricopa: the tender, elevated, loving slopes of Mt. Ord. After taking last weekend off from birding, due largely to hangover fall-out and from quite possibly the worst week of work ever, the trek up Mt. Ord was an overdue return. This was the case because many of the elevation breeders have now returned as well. The scrub lowlands were teeming with Sparrows as well as smaller numbers of the coveted Gray Vireo.
Blue-gray Gnatcatchers and Black-throated Gray Warblers are by far the most common birds this time on year on Ord. Between those two names it sounds rather dour, but even if these birds are not bursting with color, they are bursting with song, or at least bursting with song-esque sorts of noises.
The juniper/pine/oak habitat hosts many other breeders, including WEBL, LEGO, WBNU, RBNU, JUTI, HETA, and VGSW. I was even fortunate enough to hear a Northern Pygmy-Owl tooting from somewhere out in this mess. The bird quieted down as I approached closer and I could not locate it, despite waiting in the area fro another 30 minutes. I don't even know why I am mentioning this failure.
There were some vocal Grace's Warbler's mixed up in the canopy, jostling for position and prominence with Redstart and Hutton's Vireos. Yellow-throated or Grace's? Who wins in a beauty contest? Who wins in a fight? Who wins at bingo?
The old corral and water tank off FR 1688 was typically birdy, but otherwise the greatest concentrations of species were off from the main road nearer the summit of Ord, around 7,000 feet. Here I got more than an earful and less of an eyeful of the skulky Virginia's Warblers. It's ok; an eyeful of warbler sounds unpleasant anyway, makes one's eyes all black-throated blue.
There were also some holdover Cassin's Finches near the summit, and one weird-o finch hanging out on its own. It was bulkier and had more olive-green on its breast and supercilium. It looked pretty good for female Purple Finch is all I'm saying...but that would be very rare and I have no documentation, so I'm not actually saying anything.
Watching Violet-green Swallows streak through the blue sky atop Ord's summits never gets old. Trying to photograph them in flight does.
In other news, no one has re-found the Eared Quetzal since its original discovery on Friday, which is why I am writing this blog post, instead of affably losing myself in the Santa Rita Mountains. Things are getting pretty flavorful down there though, with Trogons moving onto territory and Sinaloa Wrens still ratcheting to such an extent that a desperate one-day weekend trip may be next on the cards.
Black-chinned Sparrow! I'm sitting in the Las Vegas airport as I write this, heading back home having just seen our first BCSP at Red Rocks Canyon during this trip. Ubiquitous Blue-gray Gnatcatchers was another highlight shared with this wonderland called Ord, although I'm half-tempted to cancel not to get on a plane until I've seen a Grace's Warbler now. I had no idea their range came up this far. I'm loyal to our old east coast warblers, but I'll grant that Grace's can share top-billing with Yellow-throated any day.
ReplyDeleteCheers Nicholas,
DeleteYou gotta stick with your Warblers overall, even when I start throwing up the Red-faced and Olive they still can't compete.
Were there lots and lots of Gambel's Quail in Vegas?
We didn't see or hear any, but we didn't get out there until 10, when you could really start feeling the heat. It was pretty quiet overall, except for the gnatcatchers and thrashers.
DeleteHey if you got nice looks at Crissal Thrasher though, then it's a pretty successful day!
DeleteThat Grace's Warbler is a stunner. I also notice that you have it positioned directly in front of a larger limb... are you also a practitioner of the "try to get the bird in front of the biggest limb so that your camera's focus doesn't mess up" method of photography?
ReplyDeleteHeh, I'm not sure I got the bird in perfect focus anyhow. The large limb trick does work though, I won't lie. I tend to try and get a limb, trunk, etc. behind the bird because blue sky makes for a poor background in most cases, sucking away other color and detail.
DeleteI guess, at the end of the day, I'm a practitioner of the "Holy crap there;s a bird there's a bird there's a fire fire! fire! fire! Tora! Tora! Tora!" method.
Eared Quetzal? Legit? Jesus Christ.
ReplyDeleteWell, only the original finder got a look at it. Supposedly there is a recording. These are questions that have not been fully put to rest. It's probably legit though (or was).
DeleteFor my money, some of those birds are in the Santa Ritas every year, but they go much farther up the canyons, wells beyond where birders bother to hike and look for them. I think a 2-3 day camping trip and exploration might be in order.
It's no Common Plover thought.
Those are some dapper Sparrows and Warblers. I must get to Mt. Ord sometime.
ReplyDeleteSummer and all its glory are just around the bend. Until then, alcohol and Trogons seem like a good remedy for the work woes.
Indeed! In fact, that's a pretty good solution to all things, both chemically and existentially.
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