Birding at Various Habitats In Maricopa & Pinal Counties, AZ

Tuesday, 10/16/18  Riparian Preserve at Gilbert Water Ranch; Elevation 1300'
The Water Ranch consists of seven (7) water treatment ponds plus one public fishing pond.
On flat land, the ponds are accessible through trees and shrubs with some specific openings for bird watching.
Today wasn't about the waterfowl. I hadn't yet seen the AMERICAN REDSTART being reported by many others. So, in dreary damp drizzly weather I staked out its favored location. It's a wonder I didn't step on it when I sought shelter from one quick downpour under the wide branching mesquite where it was usually seen. Eventually it poked out from the lower limbs of the tree.
While waiting for the AMERICAN REDSTART to show up, I had caught a photo of another visitor.  
GREATER ROADRUNNER

First male AMERICAN REDSTART I've seen in Arizona.
Male AMERICAN REDSTART (above & below)

View this checklist online at https://ebird.org/view/checklist/S49523797


Thursday,10/18/18 Fountain Hills Lake; Elevation 1520'
300' high fountain on each hour for 15 minutes
A few good photos from there:
VERMILION FLYCATCHER (male)



The lawns around the lake are full of AMERICAN COOT when they aren't in the water. The photo below shows the exquisite and large feet of the AMCO.

View this checklist online at https://ebird.org/view/checklist/S49280649


Friday, 10/19/18 Sunflower; Elevation 3405'
This old section of the Beeline Highway (SR 87) is lined with tall eucalyptus and cottonwood trees making it ideal for migrating and local birds. Hoping to see some LAWRENCE'S GOLDFINCH (irruption year and had been photographed there), I found zero goldfinches - not even any LESSER GOLDFINCH. But, walking along the edge of the paved road makes for easy birding that I enjoyed. The WOODHOUSE'S SCRUB JAY showed up several times at various locations.
WOODHOUSE'S SCRUB JAY
Many birds were the quick kind! No time for decent photos. Although, as I turned back toward my car (parked at pull off between Sycamore Creek & the old road), these domestic turkey came through the fence and started following me. I warned the male - looking pretty hefty - that it had best stay hidden as holidays would soon be here. 



View this checklist online at https://ebird.org/view/checklist/S49298839

Sunday, 10/21/18 Glendale Recharge Ponds; Elevation 1050'
Six Recharge Ponds are designed in two rows of very large rectangular ponds with a road-width between them. Very open; no trees within the compound of ponds but beyond that the river area is full of cottonwoods and willows.


AMERICAN WHITE PELICAN

Up, Up and Away - AMERICAN WHITE PELICANs

Overhead four (4) OSPREY managed to flush the birds from time to time, moving them from one end to the other of the same pond if not beyond to an altogether different pond. Not all ponds necessarily have water at the same time. When ponds begin to fill, shorebirds favor those ponds for the shallows and mudflats created.

OSPREY hovering while doing some serious looking
OSPREY circling around again...still looking  
View this checklist online at https://ebird.org/view/checklist/S49353631


Wednesday, 10/24/18 Rousseau Farm, Tribal Land: Mesa Drive & McDonald Rd; 1300'
Searching, again, for the LAWRENCE'S GOLDFINCH that I did find at this location.



Many birds were very distant on the sod. Did manage to photograph a few AMERICAN PIPITs in the field.
AMERICAN PIPIT (above and below)


Strikingly colored goldfinch: LAWRENCE'S
View this checklist online at https://ebird.org/view/checklist/S49427598

Friday, 10/26/18; Prospector Park, City of Apache Junction, AZ; Elevation 1800'
Awoke feeling like a quick outing, so drove north on Idaho Road to our City Park.
CACTUS WREN




























GILDED FLICKER [Note cinnamon colored (not gray) head of NoFl]   Red malar stripe indicates Male
VERMILLION FLYCATCHER (male)

View this checklist online at https://ebird.org/view/checklist/S49472382

Sunday, 10/28/18 Boyce Thompson Arboretum; Elevation 2341'
With very diverse plantings throughout the arboretum, it's possible to walk through desert landscape as well as a eucalyptus forest. Today, the attraction was the fruit on the pistachio trees! Lots of birds there as well as throughout the entire loop of the main trail.
A few photos:


CEDAR WAXWING 
Adult CEDAR WAXWING top left; juveniles (3) on left
AMERICAN ROBIN
Anne Leight, one of the bird walk leaders, spied this beauty in the distance on a utility wire along Route 60. It's late migrating out: 
female WESTERN TANAGER
Hard to stay inside when the weather has cooled allowing for more leisurely birding most anytime of day. Thus, I birded; didn't blog.  Now, up to date, more or less.

Til next time!
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View this checklist online at https://ebird.org/view/checklist/S49523797

Joined the Stakeout for a first-time-ever reported bird in Arizona, RINGED KINGFISHER; Safford, Graham County.



RINGED KINGFISHER - male.  [from internet]
Dark blue-gray upper parts; bigger than Belted Kingfisher; gigantic bill; white collar; bright rufous breast and belly; white under tail coverts
Background:
About a week prior to Roper Lake State Park Ranger Kelly Wright’s posting her sighting of the RINGED KINGFISHER, she had been alerted by Jeff Coker to the possibility of its presence. Her October 4th-posting in eBird included photos.

A common Mexican bird that, in recent past years, had inched its way up into the Rio Grande Valley area of Texas, the RINGED KINGFISHER had never been reported before in Arizona. WOW!

Did that ever hit AZ/NM LIST SERVE (Rare Bird Alert)!! 

Eighteen (18) birders showed up the next day (October 5th) to add this bird to an Arizona or Life List of their own. Ranger Kelly had seen it fly out that morning at 7 a.m., to the private pond, but, from what I can ascertain, none or few even got a glimpse of that bird on Friday, the 5th.

As it turned out, that mega-rarity was spotted by Ranger Kelly and a few other lucky birders at various ponds in the area since then making it very difficult to find.

By the second day (October 6th) after its first sighting, a “STAKEOUT” was established on eBird to post sightings or recordings. [stakeout Ringed Kingfisher, Roper Lake Rd., Safford (2018), Graham, Arizona, US].  

Roper Lake’s dam road gave the best view of both Roper Lake and its “island” as well as the marsh grasses hiding the private pond to the north. Many birders visited the area over the next week with few gratifying reports. But the few photos that did come back were awesome, intriguing . . . tantalizing.

Then, on Friday,10/12, David Stejskal and Laurens Halsey, (top AZ birders) had some luck. A truck on the north private property, flushed the bird that flew directly over and into Roper Lake where they were able to take and post very good photos of the FEMALE RINGED KINGFISHER.

So, when Muriel Neddermeyer invited me to join her on a quest for the RINGED KINGFISHER the next day (this past weekend (October 13-14), I was itching to see if we would be among the lucky ones. 

Setting out in the rain late Saturday morning, it was 2 1/2 hours later that we pulled up to the cars parked along Rt. 191, a bit beyond the entrance to Roper Lake State Park. It was still drizzling lightly.

Saturday, October 13th:
Chris McCreedy was standing along the highway beside the hidden private pond when we arrived. Our locaton was so close you could hear water splash as ducks flew in and out but could not see into the pond at all for thick brush and tall reeds. 

Having heard the bird at 10 a.m., Chris  stood waiting to see the mega-rare bird. As the drizzle got serious, he suggested we move up to Roper Lake Road (on the dam) where 360° views are available. There was also a single metal-covered ramada to keep us dryer when the rains picked up from time to time.

A previously unknown birder who arrived, Ernst Mutchnick, was the only one of several birders who stayed the course over the next several hours.

Muriel discussed the option of checking out all other water spots where the bird had been seen. Exchanging texting info with Ernst who stayed with Chris, she and I explored three areas: 
Dankworth Pond State Park
Small private pond on corner of Cactus & Lebanon Roads (ok with owner)
All sections of Roper Lake.

The long and short of it is: We enjoyed the exploration but came up empty as to the tropical RINGED KINGFISHER.

Chris reluctantly headed out around 6 p.m., as I recall. The three of us waited to see if the bird would lift up from that northern private lake to fly south overhead where we might see it. Near dark, Muriel was almost positive she saw it fly up and westward from the pond, but it was too cloudy, rainy and dark to see color. The shape was big enough and looked correct, but she couldn’t get a view of its very large bill, so she couldn’t call it with certainty. Very frustrating!   After seven (7) hours of waiting, we surrendered.

Ernst joined us for a bit of Mexican food in town before we went to separate motels.
We dreamed of seeing this female RINGED KINGFISHER
Sunday, Octobr 14th:
By 5:45 a.m., Muriel and I were out along Rt. 191 watching for the RINGED KINGFISHER to return to the private pond. With only a cloudy sky, it felt like a whole new promising day. After the State Park opened at 6 a.m., we drove over to the stakeout position.

We saw a birder over on the "island" in Roper Lake; he stayed put and did not come up to the road over the dam.  

Two hours after our arrival (7:45), Muriel and I drove out to all the other water spots to check them out again. She got the bird alert that the Ringed Kingfisher had been seen flying north to the hidden pond, yet again. What?? We didn't know precisely when it was seen by the birder on Roper Lake, but have been wondering how we missed it. 

We explored a new location: the location Muriel's sighting disappeared after she spotted it last evening. Google maps showed a little pond to the west of the private "Hidden Pond". We drove in as far as possible before coming to fences and signs telling us not to go farther.
Actually, we're good birders and wouldn't trespass without securing permission, but it looked impossible to reach anyone without crossing the fences. Thus, deterred, we returned to the growing group of birders.

Back at the stakeout on Roper Lake Road, other birders I knew or met were on the scene: Steve Valasek, Adam Stein, Chloe Walker, Linda McNulty Ernst Mutchnick...among others. At one time, I counted a dozen of us that stayed more or less the same with turnover.

The long and the short of our 9-hour standing-in-wait, was this: 
The deep rattle of the RINGED KINGFISHER was heard, perhaps 4-6 times. (I heard it 3 times.)

We had birds!

CASPIAN TERN - flying over Roper Lake --- same for all the following tern photos:
ORANGE-RED BILL, BLACK WING TIPS, BLACK CAP
Showing some of the environment around the lake and beyond; CASPIAN ADULT TERN


Near Tern on left appears to be juvenile with orange bill; lighter wingtips, less cap.

Birders, being birders, they scanned everywhere.  We saw WHITE-THROATED SWIFTS and one VAUX's SWIFT; we had RED-TAILED HAWKS. Someone discovered a huge very high kettle of TURKEY VULTUREs with additional birds in the wide-diameter swirl of the kettle.
In particular, I liked the BLACK HAWK near the bottom of the column of birds since I see it perched more frequently than in high flight; beautiful photo below by Muriel.

BLACK HAWK [Photo by Muriel Neddermeyer]

A look through Steve Valasek's scope toward the North Hidden Pond revealed a perching kingfisher. Was it the Ringed?  We had already heard the BELTED KINGFISHER and seen it through the scope once, but none of us (as far as I know) confirmed what we all wanted it to be.

Of the core birders remaining, Muriel and I pulled out of Roper Lake State Park a little after 3 p.m., disappointed yet not dejected. The camaraderie of fellow birders sharing the experience, the birds that put in an appearance and the general respect for one another was gratifying. We sensed that if the birders stayed, they would see the RINGED KINGFISHER fly back into the park at dusk...and apparently that did happen. But not on our watch!

The only record I broke was how long I've looked for a single bird in a single location:
 7+ 9=16 hours.

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View this checklist online at https://ebird.org/view/checklist/S4921042

View this checklist online at https://ebird.org/view/checklist/S49210821








Birding Here and There; Maricopa & Pinal Counties, AZ

Thursday October 4, 2018
After visiting with so many pelicans in one place yesterday, I decided to walk the Riparian Preserve at Gilbert Water Ranch. In addition to many waterfowl arriving, songbirds can be found with great regularity in the cottonwood, mesquite and palo verde trees.

Other birders were out, too; it feels good to connect with like-minded folks from time to time!

Best of my photos there, were two Snowy Egrets having a bit of a tiff over encroachment in a feeding areal.
















Although I saw 46 species, I didn't take many photos but concentrated on trying to log in every bird I saw.

E-bird link:
View this checklist online at https://ebird.org/view/checklist/S48930318

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Friday, October 5th
The next day I drove out to Mammoth Sewage Ponds to see if I could relocate the reported RED PHALAROPE seen two days' previous by Doug Jenness. Dipped on that bird, but in the most SE pond there was a flock of female ducks....so I forced myself to differentiate. Although I saw no hint of green on the smallest teal, I checked off three GREEN-WINGED TEAL based on size. They showed a bit of yellow toward the tail end and were lacking blue wings that the BLUE-WINGED and CINNAMON TEAL showed. 

The female BLUE-WINGED TEAL were detected by its white base to the bill that connected with its white throat. Too distant for photos and even too distant to detect its white eye-arcs, I was giving the identification as best I knew. The female CINNAMON TEAL appeared to have tan-colored heads and longer, wider bills than that of the other teal, more closely resembling that of Northern Shoveler.

A pair of RUDDY DUCK were swimming around the reedy edges of the north-west pond while American Coots settled on the south-west pond.

And, in the process of scanning through all the ducks, the catch on one leg of my tripod loosened to the point that the leg fell out. Scanning with a 2-legged pod, standing on top of a small berm of ground, I cannot vouch for any of the above identifications. 

View this checklist online at https://ebird.org/view/checklist/S48958130

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On my return toward home, I stopped at Aravaipa Canyon since the entrance road is located off of Route 177 between Mammoth and Dudleyville. I had the usual desert birds that I enjoy so much and just a few photos.

A CASSIN'S KINGBIRD perched on an overhead utility wire as I drove into the canyon.
Two ID markers that set this bird apart from the Western Kingbird are lack of white outer tail feathers and its tight little white bowtie at throat.

A later bird on an overhead wire puzzled me mostly because I can't recall ever seeing it from beneath. It's usually bouncing around hedgerows or even on the ground around agricultural fields. But, sure enough, it was a SAVANNAH SPARROW!



View this checklist online at https://ebird.org/view/checklist/S48958293

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Saturday, October 6th Whether this was a new rainstorm or remnants of Tropical Storm Rosa were still hanging around, I decided to go out on this wet morning anyway to see if I could locate the uncommon REDDISH EGRET at Coon Bluff reported yesterday by Usha Tatini. As luck would have it, I found the bird about the same time the drizzle let up.

At the first cove off toward Tribal Land, the REDDISH EGRET was foraging by itself, way too far for a photo, but could identify by size relative to the GREAT EGRET foraging at the mouth of the cove at the river and the GREAT BLUE HERON, perched upstream a bit farther east. I popped off a few quick photos in case I would need them, but was fortunate to be able to delete them later. More frequently seen in the Gulf Coast area and in Arizona, probably closer to the Colorado River, this is quite a find in the desert!

Continuing to walk eastward, I'm always looking for any unusual birds, along with the usuals, some of which I missed seeing or hearing. As I turned to come back along the same river path (remembering the Green Mohave rattler from my last "loop" return), I spotted the REDDISH EGRET on the same pile of sticks with the GREAT BLUE where Usha had photographed the two herons yesterday.

As I hurried toward that location, the REDDISH EGRET flew upstream -- towards me, but I lost sight of it through heavy shrubs. Hoping it had dropped down to shore again, I turned back, tracking eastward again to relocate it. Lucky me! I found it doing its wonderful REDDISH EGRET dance.






REDDISH EGRET's (REEG) slate blue body showing in its wings quite well. In good light, the back of the bird comes across as maroon-colored. Lacking the adult REEG's shaggy neck, this bird appears to be an immature pastel-colored version of the adult.

The dance includes crouching, charging (heavy-footed; not tip-toeing) across the shallows, leaping vertically with wings spread, then jabbing left and right before, in this case, turning back and repeating the ritual.

Wow! It paid to go out in the rain! By the next day, the bird was gone but there was a REDDISH EGRET reported at El Rio Open Space in Marana (down I-10 toward Tucson) and I'm wondering if it is the same Salt River bird?? 

Another delight was to see for the first time, a GREATER YELLOWLEGS foraging in a fast-walking stride through the shallows with its head beneath the water. Photos are best I could do, but the behavior made me ascertain that it was, indeed, a GREATER YELLOWLEGS!


Found a reference in Sibley 2nd Edition of this behavior


Wonderful morning!


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View this checklist online at https://ebird.org/view/checklist/S49020195








Roseate Spoonbllls and American White Pelicans in Maricopa County, AZ

ROSEATE SPOONBILL
Two days after returning from the White Mountains, I invited Hinde Silver to join me in some "target" birding--no guns, just cameras!  Target birding is not my favorite way of going out into nature and spending time with creatures, but when three (3) unusual birds arrived in Maricopa County, I really wanted to see them.  

Starting at dawn at Glendale Ponds (Phoenix West Valley) on Sunday, September 30th, we were fortunate to have the COMMON TERN fly into the space over Pond 5 within thirty minutes. Most often seen at coastal ponds and over the ocean, I'm always intrigued when such a bird shows up in the desert. With a few very distant and un-noteworthy but identifiable photos, we continued birding for a while to see what else might be foraging in the shallows at Pond 1, the only pond with some water on this date. 

Already, my mind was set to go search for target #2 at a more distant West Valley location, the Arlington Wildlife Area. How do birds find these tiny pieces of water? When I had been there two weeks' ago with Pam, the ponds were full but there was no ROSEATE SPOONBILL in sight. Today, several other birders were already there and assured us that our target species was still around.

Hanging around the now very shrunken eastern pond, we watched WHITE-FACED IBIS circle overhead and land to preen on the dry part of the pond. 



Hinde had talked with Anne Leight, one of the other birders, who suggested we keep a close eye on the Ibis as the Spoonbill often flew with them. Hmmm. Not this time. That colorful bird can hardly hide out here in drab desert. I scanned snag trees to the east. Nada. 

Then, there it was - coming in right over our heads, circling, circling...but never landing while we were present.



Beautiful in every way: ROSEATE SPOONBILL -- a Life Bird for Hinde - and just a rare wonderful sighting of a Florida and Texas bird I had seen many times. 

One more bird to accomplish a 3 out of 3 target species: will we make it??  Having strong doubts and feeling a bit done in by the growing heat, we drove back to our East Valley of Phoenix to check out the Riparian Preserve at Gilbert Water Ranch. We didn't doubt its presence. I doubted we'd see the bird; it's a skulker.

Scanning my binoculars over the south end of Pond 6 thoroughly without result, I continued scanning the west side of the pond. Its markings provide the bird with great camouflage in reeds and bushes.

"Hinde! Look over there on that little limb!"

"That's it!" she exclaimed.


AMERICAN BITTERN  [internet photo]  Too distant for my camera
What a day! 

Not only did we see three birds seldom seen so close to where we live, we enjoyed the "rush" of success.


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Link to eBird lists:
View this checklist online at https://ebird.org/view/checklist/S48848425
View this checklist online at https://ebird.org/view/checklist/S48869937

View this checklist online at https://ebird.org/view/checklist/S48849060



View this checklist online at https://ebird.org/view/checklist/S48849277










Remnants of Tropical Storm Rosa brought us some much-needed rain the next two days. We've been in a prolonged years-drought and even the wet monsoon season this summer did not refill the aquifers. This storm should help.

After a storm, though, a birder always thinks: "What got blown in?"  On Wednesday, October 3rd, I saw a report of AMERICAN WHITE PELICANS at Fountain Hills Lake, about an hour's drive through back country (for me). Storm related? I have no idea.

Still quite cloudy with potential for more rain, I set out to see the pelicans on this limited lake for such large birds. But sure enough, my first sight was "gobs" of them hanging close to the shore at the northern end of the pond.
AMERICAN WHITE PELICANS hugging the shore of one of the islands in Fountain Hills Lake, AZ
View of lake and beautiful surroundings as pelican flies over
Mallards and American Coot looking at the parade of intruders
Relative size between DOUBLE-CRESTED CORMORANT (foreground) and the AMERICAN WHITE PELICAN


“A wonderful bird is the Pelican.
His beak can hold more than his belly can.
He can hold in his beak
Enough food for a week!
But I'll be darned if I know how the hellican?”


― Dixon Lanier Merritt

Friends on Facebook reminded me of this little poem after I posted the above photo.



As I saw the pelicans from shore at one spot.
Preening on shore
Stabilizing itself as it swims out of the water onto land
Difficult to count as the AMERICAN WHITE PELICANS stuck tightly together most of the time (36-my count)
Single AMERICAN WHITE PELICAN (separated from group by my camera)
AWPE would fly short distances from time to time at Fountain Hills Lake
Final photo of hundreds that I took!
It was a good antidote to my target birding on Sunday to the distant West Valley. I just hung out and enjoyed the many people taking photos with their smart phones, the dog walkers, joggers but mostly, those incredible AMERICAN WHITE PELICANS!


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View this checklist online at https://ebird.org/view/checklist/S48911810

On my way home from Fountain Hills, I stopped at Saguaro Lake to check the birds. The sky was much more threatening here than at F.H. where there was occasional sun. So, I focused on the cloud scene - a rarity in the dry desert.



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