*          *          *



HIGH ISLAND - HILL COUNTRY MBWEEK SUMMARY


April 19 - 27, 2014


Well, where do you start with a summary of the highlights of the MBWeek with the largest-ever species total? By my count we came up with a grand total of 269, no fewer than 31 species more than on this trip in 2012! The total of 238 on that MBWeek had been our previous record; runners-up were the 230 species on the one-week California-Arizona MBW in 2010, and 228 on the 2012 South Texas MBW. (There have also been totals of 250 on both the 2011 and 2012 California & Arizona MBWeeks, but that was over two weeks.)


The Houston-Big Thicket-High Island-Bolivar Peninsula-Beaumont area portion of this trip through the morning of April 24 yielded 214 species (there were "only" 198 in this region in 2012), and no fewer than 124 species on the Hill Country portion from the afternoon of April 24 on (26 more than the 96 species here in 2012). I suppose part of this year's improvement was due to a couple of changes in the itinerary: staying in Jasper rather than Houston the first night gave us more time in the Big Thicket, and basing the Hill Country portion in Uvalde rather than Kerrville made for shorter drives to Garner State Park (my favorite!), Neal's Lodge, the bat cave, Cook's Slough, and Chalk Bluff Park.


It's also curious that we were able to see so many birds given that the weather was not in our favor. True, there was virtually no rain and the winds were on the light side, but at the same time there were no "fall-out" conditions to ground warblers and other passerines at High Island or Sabine Woods. And despite that we still managed to come up with no fewer than 35 warbler species! In addition, though there was only one known flooded rice field around the Winnie area, we listed an impressive total of 34 shorebirds! Note as well that it was too hot in the Hill Country (the Thursday to Sunday highs in Uvalde were 97, 93, 88, and 97 degrees), but the birding there was much better than in 2012 as noted above.


I readily admit that birding success is often a matter of luck, and by my count there were about 35 species on our long list that were represented by a single individual, so that our total could easily have been more modest. And certainly not everyone in the group saw all 269 of them – there are always individual misses on any birding trip, and I counted a dozen or so that I missed myself. Another number worth noting is that our total of "non-Minnesota" species was 83 (see those boldfaced below).

          

Of the 34 shorebirds we found, I suppose that Ruff at Anahuac had to be the best of these, while the Worm-eating, Swainson's, Golden-cheeked, and Rufous-capped were probably the highlights in our list of 35 warblers. Other special highlights were finding both Mississippi and Swallow-tailed kites near Liberty and the Trinity River; hearing both Common Poorwills and a Chuck-will's-widow after our visit to the bat cave; simultaneously seeing Red-cockaded Woodpeckers, Bachman's Sparrows, and Brown-headed Nuthatches in a patch of piney woods near Jasper; the cooperative pair of Black-capped Vireos at Neal's Lodge, along with 5 singing males along the Davis' road; and our private tour of the Beaumont sewage treatment facility to see Fish Crows and other birds.


Special thanks are first due to Paul and Betty Rae Davis, of course, for our day with them on the 26th – hosting our lunch at their "rustic-cabin-in-the-woods", providing their 4-wheel drive vehicle for our drive farther up the driveway, and certainly as we were their guests for dinner at The Laurel Tree! We also thank George Newsome in Beaumont for showing us around the sewage treatment plant.


ITINERARY


April 19: Meet at IAH car rental center at 2:30 pm, brief visit to Jesse Jones Park, and drive to Jasper; mediocre dinner at Casa Olé and night at Super 8. 


April 20: Morning at CR-54 Red-cockaded colony near Sam Rayburn Reservoir and at Martin Dies State Park; afternoon at Gore Store Rd and Big Thicket Visitors Center; drive to Winnie for first of 4 nights at Days Inn (and first of 3 dinners at Al T's).  


April 21: Morning at Anahuac NWR and afternoon at High Island's Boy Scout Woods & Smith Oaks. 


April 22: Fairview Road, Smith Oaks at High Island, Bolivar Peninsula, and return to Boy Scout Woods & Hooks Woods at High Island. 


April 23: Sabine Woods, Sea Rim State Park, Beaumont sewage plant, Tyrrell Park, FM 1941 rice field, and final return to High Island.


April 24: Morning at pastures/crayfish ponds near Nome and successful kite searches at Liberty/Trinity River & vicinity; afternoon drive to Uvalde via lunch at Joel's BBQ in Flatonia, mediocre dinner at Napoli's, and first of 3 nights at Quality Inn in Utopia.


April 25: Morning at Garner State Park (old entrance road) and Neal's Lodge; afternoon along FM 2690 and Cooks Slough, return to Neal's for early dinner, and evening tour at Frio River bat cave.


April 26: Lost Maples State Natural Area, Paul & Betty Rae Davis' "cabin", Utopia City Park & vicinity, and dinner at The Laurel Tree. 


April 27: Morning along Hwy 55, Chalk Bluff Park, and return to Cooks Slough; afternoon drive to San Antonio for return flights home (well, I'm told a few of you made it home before midnight!). 


BIRD LIST


- HI = seen/heard on High Island portion of MBWeek, April 19 – April 24 (morning)

- HC = seen/heard on Hill country portion of MBWeek, April 24 (afternoon) – April 27  

- boldfaced species = "non-Minnesota" species (i.e., absent/accidental/casual on MN list) 


Black-bellied Whistling-Duck      HI,HC

Fulvous Whistling-Duck      HI (especially at Anahuac NWR)

Wood Duck      HI

Gadwall      HI

American Wigeon      HI

Mottled Duck      HI

Blue-winged Teal      HI,HC

Cinnamon Teal      HI (a write-in at Anahuac)

Northern Shoveler      HI

Green-winged Teal      HI


Northern Bobwhite      HI,HC (Bill's #1 target species)


Wild Turkey      HC


Pied-billed Grebe      HI,HC       


Neotropic Cormorant      HI,HC (incl nests at High Island)   

Double-crested Cormorant      HI   


American White Pelican      HI

Brown Pelican      HI


American Bittern      HI (Anahuac)

Least Bittern      HI (or was this Bill's #1 target?)

Great Blue Heron      HI,HC

Great Egret      HI     

Snowy Egret      HI

Little Blue Heron      HI

Tricolored Heron      HI

Reddish Egret      HI

Cattle Egret      HI   

Green Heron      HI,HC

Black-crowned Night-Heron      HI,HC

Yellow-crowned Night-Heron      HI


White Ibis      HI

White-faced Ibis      HI,HC

Roseate Spoonbill      HI (also nesting at High Island)


Black Vulture      HI,HC

Turkey Vulture      HI,HC


Osprey      HI,HC


Swallow-tailed Kite      HI (3 at the "usual spot" along Hwy 90!)

Mississippi Kite      HI (best sighting at Liberty)

Northern Harrier      HI

Cooper’s Hawk      HC   

Harris’s Hawk      HC

Red-shouldered Hawk      HC

Broad-winged Hawk      HI,HC

Swainson’s Hawk      HI,HC 

White-tailed Hawk      HI (thanks to a tip from VENT) 

Zone-tailed Hawk      HC (seen twice)

Red-tailed Hawk      HI,HC


Clapper Rail      HI (Yacht Basin Rd)

King Rail      HI (standing on the lawn at Anahuac; also babies near Nome!)

Sora      HI

Purple Gallinule      HI (Anahuac)

Common Gallinule      HI

American Coot      HI,HC


Black-necked Stilt      HI

American Avocet      HI


American Oystercatcher      HI


Black-bellied Plover      HI

American Golden-Plover      HI

Snowy Plover      HI (Sea Rim State Park pair)

Wilson's Plover      HI

Semipalmated Plover      HI

Piping Plover      HI

Killdeer      HI,HC


Spotted Sandpiper      HI,HC

Solitary Sandpiper      HI

Greater Yellowlegs      HI

Willet      HI

Lesser Yellowlegs      HI

Upland Sandpiper      HI (pastures near Nome)

Whimbrel      HI

Hudsonian Godwit      HI (at the only flooded rice field)

Marbled Godwit      HI

Ruddy Turnstone      HI

Red Knot      HI (1 at Bolivar mostly in winter plumage)

Ruff      HI (difficult but diagnostic view at Anahuac)

Stilt Sandpiper      HI

Sanderling      HI

Dunlin      HI

Baird's Sandpiper      HI (Sea Rim)

Least Sandpiper      HI

White-rumped Sandpiper      HI (briefly at Sea Rim)

Pectoral Sandpiper      HI

Semipalmated Sandpiper      HI

Western Sandpiper      HI

Short-billed Dowitcher      HI

Long-billed Dowitcher      HI

Wilson’s Phalarope      HI (= 34 shorebird species!)


Bonaparte's Gull      HI

Laughing Gull      HI

Franklin's Gull      HC (1 at Cooks Slough)

Ring-billed Gull      HI

Herring Gull      HI

Glaucous Gull      HI (unexpected fly-by at Bolivar)

Least Tern      HI

Gull-billed Tern      HI

Black Tern      HI

Common Tern      HI

Forster's Tern      HI

Royal Tern      HI (but no Caspians)

Sandwich Tern      HI 

Black Skimmer      HI


Rock Pigeon      HI,HC

Eurasian Collared-Dove      HI

White-winged Dove      HI,HC

Mourning Dove      HI,HC

Inca Dove      HI,HC

Common Ground-Dove      HC


Yellow-billed Cuckoo      HI,HC

Greater Roadrunner      HC


Eastern Screech-Owl      HI (heard-only at Jones Park)

Great Horned Owl      HC (2 babies at Lost Maples)


Lesser Nighthawk      HC (fly-bys near Uvalde)

Common Nighthawk      HI

Common Poorwill      HC (heard well near the bat cave)

Chuck-will's-widow      HC (ditto)


Chimney Swift      HI,HC


Ruby-throated Hummingbird      HI,HC

Black-chinned Hummingbird      HC

    

Belted Kingfisher      HI

Green Kingfisher      HC (1 seen by Bill at Cooks Slough)


Red-headed Woodpecker      HI

Golden-fronted Woodpecker      HI,HC (incl 1 out-of-range at Sabine Woods)

Red-bellied Woodpecker      HI

Yellow-bellied Sapsucker      HI

Ladder-backed Woodpecker      HC

Downy Woodpecker      HI

Red-cockaded Woodpecker      HI (cooperative staked-out pair)

Northern Flicker      HI (heard-only)

Pileated Woodpecker      HI


Crested Caracara      HI,HC

American Kestrel      HI   

Merlin      HI (1 at Anahuac)


Eastern Wood-Pewee      HI,HC

Acadian Flycatcher      HI,HC

Least Flycatcher      HI

Black Phoebe      HC (Neal's Lodge)     


Eastern Phoebe      HC     

Vermilion Flycatcher      HC

Ash-throated Flycatcher      HC (imitating Brown-cresteds?)     

Great Crested Flycatcher      HI

Brown-crested Flycatcher      HC (best at Cook's Slough)

Couch's Kingbird      HC (incl 1 in the Quality Inn parking lot)

Western Kingbird      HC         

Eastern Kingbird      HI

Scissor-tailed Flycatcher      HI,HC (Bernice's favorite?)


Loggerhead Shrike      HI


White-eyed Vireo      HI,HC

Bell’s Vireo      HC

Black-capped Vireo      HC (best at Neal's; plus 5 singing males on the Davis' land)

Yellow-throated Vireo      HI,HC

Blue-headed Vireo      HI,HC

Hutton’s Vireo      HC (incl a nest at Lost Maples)

Warbling Vireo      HI

Philadelphia Vireo      HI

Red-eyed Vireo      HI,HC


Blue Jay      HI,HC

Western Scrub-Jay      HC

American Crow      HI,HC

Fish Crow      HI (thanks to George at the sewage treatment plant)

Common Raven      HC


Purple Martin      HI,HC

Tree Swallow      HI

Northern Rough-winged Swallow      HI,HC

Bank Swallow      HI

Cliff Swallow      HI,HC   

Cave Swallow      HC (best at the bat cave)

Barn Swallow      HI,HC


Carolina Chickadee      HI,HC

Tufted Titmouse      HI

Black-crested Titmouse      HC


Verdin      HC (best at Cooks Slough)


White-breasted Nuthatch      HI (heard-only)

Brown-headed Nuthatch      HI (at the Red-cockaded/Bachman's spot)


Canyon Wren      HC (heard-only)

House Wren      HC

Sedge Wren      HI (several heard-only)

Marsh Wren      HI

Carolina Wren      HI,HC

Bewick's Wren      HC

Cactus Wren      HC


Blue-gray Gnatcatcher      HI,HC   


Ruby-crowned Kinglet      HI


Eastern Bluebird      HI,HC

Veery      HI

Gray-cheeked Thrush      HI

Swainson's Thrush      HI

Wood Thrush      HI   


Gray Catbird      HI

Brown Thrasher      HI

Curve-billed Thrasher      HC (along Hwy 55)     


Northern Mockingbird      HI,HC


European Starling      HI,HC


Cedar Waxwing      HI,HC


Ovenbird      HI

Worm-eating Warbler      HI (finally seen by Pete at High Island)

Louisiana Waterthrush      HI,HC

Northern Waterthrush      HI

Golden-winged Warbler      HI

Blue-winged Warbler      HI (only seen once by a few at Sabine Woods)

Black-and-white Warbler      HI,HC

Prothonotary Warbler      HI

Swainson's Warbler      HI (best at Martin Dies State Park)

Tennessee Warbler      HI,HC

Orange-crowned Warbler      HC (1 lingering at Neal's)

Nashville Warbler      HI,HC

Kentucky Warbler      HI

Common Yellowthroat      HI   

Hooded Warbler      HI

American Redstart      HI

Cerulean Warbler      HI

Northern Parula      HI,HC

Magnolia Warbler      HI

Bay-breasted Warbler      HI (1 at Sabine Woods)

Blackburnian Warbler      HI

Yellow Warbler      HI,HC

Chestnut-sided Warbler      HI

Blackpoll Warbler      HI

Palm Warbler      HI (1 lingering at Sabine Woods)

Pine Warbler      HI

Yellow-rumped Warbler      HI

Yellow-throated Warbler      HI,HC

Prairie Warbler      HI (Gore Store Rd only)

Golden-cheeked Warbler      HC (especially at Garner and at the Davis') 

Black-throated Green Warbler      HI

Rufous-capped Warbler      HC (species #269 at Chalk Bluff Park)

Canada Warbler      HI

Wilson's Warbler      HI

Yellow-breasted Chat      HI,HC (= 35 warbler species!)


Olive Sparrow      HC (best at Neal's)

Spotted Towhee      HC

Eastern Towhee      HI (heard-only)

Rufous-crowned Sparrow      HC (Lost Maples)         

Cassin’s Sparrow      HC

Bachman's Sparrow      HI (singing in the shadows of the Red-cockaded pines) 

Chipping Sparrow      HC     

Clay-colored Sparrow      HC

Field Sparrow      HC (heard-only)

Lark Sparrow      HC

Black-throated Sparrow      HC (along Hwy 55)

Savannah Sparrow      HI

Grasshopper Sparrow      HC

Seaside Sparrow      HI (close views on Tuna Rd)

Lincoln's Sparrow      HC

Swamp Sparrow      HI,HC

White-throated Sparrow      HI

White-crowned Sparrow      HI,HC


Summer Tanager      HI,HC     

Scarlet Tanager      HI

Northern Cardinal      HI,HC

Pyrrhuloxia      HC (also along Hwy 55)

Rose-breasted Grosbeak      HI

Blue Grosbeak      HI,HC

Indigo Bunting      HI,HC

Painted Bunting      HI,HC

Dickcissel      HI,HC


Red-winged Blackbird      HI,HC   

Eastern Meadowlark      HI

Common Grackle      HI (where was Jeff?)

Boat-tailed Grackle      HI

Great-tailed Grackle      HI,HC       

Bronzed Cowbird      HI,HC

Brown-headed Cowbird      HI,HC         

Orchard Oriole      HI,HC     

Hooded Oriole      HC (chasing the kingbird at Quality Inn)

Bullock's Oriole      HC (1 elusive bird at Cook's Slough)

Baltimore Oriole      HI

Scott’s Oriole      HC (Lost Maples)


House Finch      HC

Lesser Goldfinch      HC


House Sparrow      HI,HC



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HIGH ISLAND - HILL COUNTRY MBWEEK SUMMARY


April 14 - 22, 2012


Given that this was MBW's first attempt to cover both High Island and the Hill Country in a week (even the regular tour companies don't normally do this), I'd still have to say things worked out quite well. True, much of our time on the Gore Store Road was not as productive as it used to be, the back-up sites near Jasper were too far away, we never managed to fit Sabine Woods into our itinerary, and I would have liked to spend more time at Anahuac NWR and the Bolivar Peninsula.


But our travel day from Winnie to Kerrville went even better than I had hoped, since it included a highly successful Swainson's Warbler photo-op (!), several nice additions to our list on Yacht Basin and Tuna roads, some impressive parakeet nests, and no real traffic difficulties around Houston or San Antonio. And while our visits to Lost Maples were limited, the times we spent instead with Paul & Betty Rae Davis' Zone-tailed Hawk and Golden-cheeked Warbler and with Neal's Lodge's Tropical Parula certainly made for favorable trade-offs.


All this resulted in an impressive bird list of no fewer than 238 species, and I have to think a total of 250 could easily be reached with some adjustments in the itinerary. Note that we turned up nearly 200 species on the Houston-High Island-Big Thicket portion of the MBW – besides that special warbler at Taylor's Bayou, some of the highlights included both whistling-ducks, the rookery at Smith Oaks, King Rails (and Least Bitterns) at Anahuac, nearly 30 shorebird species, 9 tern species at once at Rollover Pass, Red-cockaded Woodpeckers on our first morning, and 29 warbler species (with Tropical Parula and Golden-cheeked making a final total of 31). Especially memorable as well was the fallout of birds on Monday at Smith Oaks (especially kingbirds, tanagers, grosbeaks, buntings, and orioles), with birds seeming to appear out of nowhere in the treetops.


Although the species total in the Hill Country part of the MBW was some 100 species less than we had in the High Island region, remember that we birded there for only two days (instead of nearly five farther east), and the variety of ducks, shorebirds, gulls/terns, and other waterbirds there is quite limited. Still, along with the Zone-tailed Hawk and those two warblers mentioned earlier, these two days produced several memorable highlights: Vermilion and other flycatchers, a Bell's Vireo nest, those Black-capped Vireos (especially at Kerr WMA, of course), Olive, Rufous-crowned, and other sparrows, and Bullock's and Scott's orioles. In addition, much of the scenery along the roads we traveled was impressive, and those who did the Frio Bat Cave option will not soon forget that spectacle.  


ITINERARY


April 14 - Early afternoon arrival in Houston and birding option to Jesse Jones County Park; night in Houston.


April 15 - Morning at W Goodrich Jones State Forest (Red-cockaded Woodpecker), then drive east to Winnie (for first of 4 nights) via Trinity River bottoms E of Dayton and Nome-area pastures/fields/rice paddies; brief evening option to Taylor's Slough.


April 16 - All day at High Island, especially Smith Oaks Bird Sanctuary.


April 17 - Rollover Pass, return to High Island/Smith Oaks, and afternoon at Anahuac NWR.


April 18 - Big Thicket Visitors Center/Kirby Trail road, Gore Store Rd, Sandy Creek Campground & vicinity, Boykin Springs area, and Tyrrell Park & Beaumont sewage treatment plant.


April 19 - Morning at Taylor's Bayou (Swainson's Warbler!), High Island, Bolivar Peninsula (incl Rollover Pass, Yacht Basin and Tuna roads), and ferry to Galveston; afternoon drive to Kerrville (for first of 3 nights) via Monk Parakeet nests in Pearland.


April 20 - All day in Hill Country, especially Kerr WMA (Black-capped Vireo) and Paul & Betty Rae Davis' (Golden-cheeked Warbler); evening option to Frio Bat Cave.


April 21 - All day in Hill Country, especially Neal's Lodge (Tropical Parula), Cook's Slough, and Lost Maples State Natural Area.


April 22 - Morning return to San Antonio for flights home.


BIRD LIST


boldfaced species = "non-Minnesota" birds (i.e., absent/accidental/casual in MN)


HI = seen only in High Island-Houston-Big Thicket-Bolivar area (April 14-19)

HC = seen only in Hill Country (April 20-22)

(species not annotated were found in both areas)


MBWeek total = 238 species

High Island area total = 198 species (including 142 not seen in HC)

Hill Country area total  = 96 species (including 40 not seen in HI)


  Fulvous Whistling-Duck     HI (especially at Anahuac NWR)

  Black-bellied Whistling-Duck

  Wood Duck     HI

  Gadwall     HI

  American Wigeon     HI

  Mallard     HI

  Mottled Duck     HI

  Blue-winged Teal     HI

  Northern Shoveler

  Green-winged Teal     HI

  Lesser Scaup     HI

  Red-breasted Merganser     HI


  Wild Turkey     HC


  Pied-billed Grebe     HI


  Neotropic Cormorant     HI (especially at the Smith Oaks rookery)

  Double-crested Cormorant


  Brown Pelican     HI


  Least Bittern     HI (entertaining at Anahuac)

  Great Blue Heron

  Great Egret

  Snowy Egret

  Little Blue Heron     HI

  Tricolored Heron     HI

  Reddish Egret     HI (only one white-morph?)

  Cattle Egret

  Green Heron

  Black-crowned Night-Heron

  Yellow-crowned Night-Heron     HI


  White Ibis     HI

  White-faced Ibis     HI

  Roseate Spoonbill     HI (the Smith Oaks rookery specialty)


  Black Vulture

  Turkey Vulture


  Osprey


  Swallow-tailed Kite     HI (Trinity River bottoms)

  Bald Eagle     HI

  Northern Harrier     HI

  Cooper's Hawk     HC

  Red-shouldered Hawk     HI (heard-only at Taylor's Bayou?)

  Broad-winged Hawk     HI

  Swainson's Hawk

  Red-tailed Hawk

  Zone-tailed Hawk     HC (picnicking with us at the Davis')


  Crested Caracara

  Merlin     HI

  Peregrine Falcon     HI


  Clapper Rail     HI (Yacht Basin Rd)

  King Rail     HI (finally cooperated at Anahuac)

  Sora     HI (heard-only)

  Purple Gallinule     HI (only at the Smith Oaks rookery)

  Common Moorhen     HI

  American Coot


  Black-bellied Plover     HI

  Wilson's Plover     HI (Rollover Pass)

  Semipalmated Plover     HI

  Killdeer     HI


  American Oystercatcher     HI (including good ol' number X3 at Rollover)


  Black-necked Stilt     HI

  American Avocet     HI


  Spotted Sandpiper     HI

  Solitary Sandpiper     HI

  Greater Yellowlegs     HI

  Willet     HI

  Lesser Yellowlegs     HI

  Upland Sandpiper     HI (Crystal Beach)

  Whimbrel     HI

  Hudsonian Godwit     HI (distant few at Anahuac)

  Marbled Godwit     HI

  Ruddy Turnstone     HI

  Red Knot     HI (Rollover Pass)

  Sanderling     HI

  Semipalmated Sandpiper     HI

  Western Sandpiper     HI

  Least Sandpiper     HI

  Pectoral Sandpiper     HI

  Dunlin     HI

  Stilt Sandpiper     HI

  Buff-breasted Sandpiper     HI (spotted by Leslie at Anahuac)

  Short-billed Dowitcher     HI

  Long-billed Dowitcher     HI

  Wilson's Phalarope     HI (= 29 shorebird species)


  Laughing Gull     HI

  Ring-billed Gull     HI

  Herring Gull     HI

  Least Tern     HI (Rollover Pass)

  Gull-billed Tern     HI (Rollover Pass & Anahuac)

  Caspian Tern     HI

  Black Tern     HI

  Common Tern     HI

  Forster's Tern     HI

  Royal Tern     HI

  Sandwich Tern     HI (Rollover Pass)

  Black Skimmer     HI (= 9 terns simultaneously at Rollover)


  Rock Pigeon

  Eurasian Collared-Dove

  White-winged Dove

  Mourning Dove

  Inca Dove     HI


Monk Parakeet     HI (thanks to a tip from Barb's Pearland friends)


  Yellow-billed Cuckoo     HI

  Greater Roadrunner     HC (only one)


  Barred Owl     HI (heard-only)


  Common Nighthawk     HI

  Chuck-will's-widow     HC (heard-only by the bat cave gate)


  Chimney Swift


  Ruby-throated Hummingbird

  Black-chinned Hummingbird     HC


  Belted Kingfisher


  Red-headed Woodpecker     HI

  Golden-fronted Woodpecker     HC

  Red-bellied Woodpecker     HI

  Yellow-bellied Sapsucker     HI

  Ladder-backed Woodpecker     HC

  Downy Woodpecker

  RED-COCKADED WOODPECKER     HI (a pair eventually cooperated at Jones Forest)

  Pileated Woodpecker     HI


  Eastern Wood-Pewee

  Acadian Flycatcher     HI

  Black Phoebe     HC (Neal's Lodge)

  Eastern Phoebe     HC

  Vermilion Flycatcher     HC

  Ash-throated Flycatcher     HC

  Great Crested Flycatcher     HI

  Brown-crested Flycatcher     HC (Neal's Lodge)

  Western Kingbird     HC

  Eastern Kingbird     HI

  Scissor-tailed Flycatcher


  Loggerhead Shrike     HI


  White-eyed Vireo

  Bell's Vireo     HC (at a Cook's Slough nest spotted by Norma)

  BLACK-CAPPED VIREO     HC (especially at Kerr WMA; also along the Davis' driveway)

  Yellow-throated Vireo

  Hutton's Vireo     HC (4 heard/seen; 0 used to be normal)

  Warbling Vireo     HI

  Red-eyed Vireo


  Blue Jay     HI

Western Scrub-Jay     HC

  American Crow     HI

  Fish Crow     HI (2 Beaumont locations)

  Common Raven     HC


  Purple Martin

  Tree Swallow     HI

  Northern Rough-winged Swallow

  Bank Swallow     HI (leader-only?)

  Cliff Swallow

  Cave Swallow

  Barn Swallow


  Carolina Chickadee

  Tufted Titmouse     HI

  Black-crested Titmouse     HC


  Brown-headed Nuthatch     HI (best at Jones Forest)


  Canyon Wren     HC

  Carolina Wren

  Bewick's Wren     HC

  House Wren     HC (Norma-only in Kerrville)

  Sedge Wren     HI (heard-only)

  Marsh Wren     HI (heard-only)


  Blue-gray Gnatcatcher


  Eastern Bluebird

  Veery     HI

  Swainson's Thrush     HI

  Wood Thrush     HI

  American Robin     HI


  Gray Catbird     HI

  Northern Mockingbird

  Brown Thrasher     HI


  European Starling


  Cedar Waxwing     HI


  Ovenbird     HI

  Worm-eating Warbler     HI (only the second time I've heard one sing)

  waterthrush, sp.     (heard-only; probably Northern at HI and Louisiana at HC)

  Golden-winged Warbler     HI

  Blue-winged Warbler     HI

  Black-and-white Warbler

  Prothonotary Warbler     HI

  SWAINSON'S WARBLER     HI (finally at Taylor's Bayou on our 6th day)

  Tennessee Warbler     HI

  Nashville Warbler

  Kentucky Warbler     HI (best along Gore Store Rd)

  Common Yellowthroat     HI

  Hooded Warbler     (incl a surprise at Lost Maples)

  American Redstart     HI

  Cerulean Warbler     HI

  Northern Parula     HI

  TROPICAL PARULA     HC (great looks at Neal's and our only write-in)

  Magnolia Warbler     HI

  Blackburnian Warbler     HI

  Yellow Warbler     HI

  Chestnut-sided Warbler     HI

  Blackpoll Warbler     HI (seen by those in Al's car on Tuna Rd)

  Palm Warbler     HI (ditto)

  Pine Warbler     HI

  Yellow-rumped Warbler     HI (Barb-only)

  Yellow-throated Warbler

  Prairie Warbler     HI (best along Gore Store Rd)

  GOLDEN-CHEEKED WARBLER     HC (thanks to Paul Davis and his vehicles)

  Black-throated Green Warbler     HI

  Canada Warbler     HI (Leslie-only)

  Yellow-breasted Chat     (= 31 warbler species)


  Olive Sparrow     HC (Cook's Slough)

  Rufous-crowned Sparrow     HC

  Canyon Towhee     HC

  Cassin's Sparrow     HC

  Bachman's Sparrow     HI (heard-only in Boykin Springs area)

  Chipping Sparrow     HC

  Clay-colored Sparrow     HC

  Field Sparrow     HC

  Lark Sparrow     HC

  Savannah Sparrow

  Grasshopper Sparrow     HC

  Nelson's Sparrow     HI (Yacht Basin Rd)

  Seaside Sparrow     HI (Tuna Rd)

  Lincoln's Sparrow     HC (leader-only?)

  White-throated Sparrow     HI


  Summer Tanager

  Scarlet Tanager     HI

  Northern Cardinal

  Rose-breasted Grosbeak     HI

  Blue Grosbeak

  Indigo Bunting

  Painted Bunting     HI (only one at Smith Oaks?)

  Dickcissel     HI (Tuna Rd)


  Bobolink     HI (Tuna Rd)

  Red-winged Blackbird

  Eastern Meadowlark     HI

  Yellow-headed Blackbird

  Common Grackle     HI

  Boat-tailed Grackle     HI

  Great-tailed Grackle

  Bronzed Cowbird     HC

  Brown-headed Cowbird

  Orchard Oriole     HI

  Bullock's Oriole     HC

  Baltimore Oriole     HI

  Scott's Oriole     HC (seen by some at Lost Maples)


  House Finch     HC

  Lesser Goldfinch     HC


  House Sparrow



*          *          *


PHOTO GALLERY


   

Also see the PHOTO GALLERY

following the summaries of the 2016, 2014, and 2012 MBWeeks


__________



HIGH ISLAND - HILL COUNTRY MBWEEK

April 23 - May 1, 2016


"There are no good snakes or bad snakes. A snake is just a snake.”

                                                 –Ranger Amy, Martin Dies State Park, April 24, 2016



So, I wonder if you could say the same thing about birding tours. Neither good nor bad. A tour is just a tour. I’ll have to think about that….


I suppose there were some things that didn’t work out as well as we had hoped, but offhand I can only think of a couple, and I doubt that “bad” is the way to describe them. The bland weather during our days in the woods at High Island/Sabine Woods failed to provide many migrant passerines, and I think we had only 17 warblers there. And the 5-6 Black-capped Vireos we heard in the Hill Country were frustrating and elusive, but unfortunately this is the norm when a couple of those in a group never manage to get a clear view of this most secretive species.


But that was about it. One might be tempted at first to think of our final species total of 249 as disappointing compared to the 269 on the 2014 MBW, but it was still a decent number and more than the 238 we had in 2012. And while migrant warblers were scarce at High Island, we did eventually manage a total of 28 species in all – though less than the amazing total of 35 in 2014, this was only a few shy of our 31 species in 2012. As for shorebirds, we came up with a respectable total of 31 species: a few less than in 2014 (34), but a couple more than in 2012 (29).


As might be expected, the first five days of this MBWeek in the High Island region (from Jesse Jones near IAH to Edith Moore Sanctuary in Houston) had the most birds: 201 species, while the last three days in the Hill Country (from our arrival in Uvalde to the SAT airport) listed 110 species with far fewer water birds available for us to see. Note that 139 of the birds on our list were only found on the High Island portion, while 48 were only in the Hill Country portion.


With so many birds on our list, there was certainly a long list of highlights. Dawn on our first morning in the Piney Woods featured Red-cockaded Woodpeckers, Brown-headed Nuthatches, and some uncharacteristically elusive Bachman’s Sparrows, and later that day at Martin Dies State Park and elsewhere in the Big Thicket we found Swainson’s Warblers surprisingly easy to see.


The next day at High Island may not have turned up many warblers, but the rookery at Smith Oaks was most entertaining with its nesting spoonbills, egrets, and cormorants, along with our first Purple Gallinule. The nearby Bolivar Peninsula provided us with lots of shorebirds (especially Wilson’s, Snowy, and banded Piping plovers), along with fuzzy black Clapper Rail chicks, and both Seaside and Nelson’s sparrows on Tuna Road. And at least three invisible Black Rails called clearly by day from the marshes at Anahuac NWR, while elsewhere in and around the refuge both whistling-ducks and King Rails were seen.  


Our drive west to the Hill Country was highlighted by a stop at Liberty Municipal Park where at least three Mississippi Kites appeared close at hand just as we were about to leave the park, including a copulating pair and the male bringing sticks to its nest. Meanwhile, our only Swallow-tailed Kite of the trip happened by as well.


Our first Hill Country day featured many memorable birds: great looks at Golden-cheeked Warblers plus Hutton’s Vireos at Garner State Park; our first uncooperative Black-capped Vireo, more singing Golden-cheeked Warblers, a surprising White-tipped Dove, and several other species of note at Lost Maples; an unexpected Tropical Parula in full song interrupting our checklist session outside Neal’s Dining Room; and the usual spectacular flight that evening at the Frio Bat Cave – not only were there countless numbers of bats, but Cave Swallows circled above the cave, and we were serenaded by Chuck-will’s-widows and Common Poorwills after dark.  


The next day began at Cook’s Slough where we found Olive Sparrow, Green Kingfisher, and other noteworthy species; then a drive up Highway 55 out of Uvalde provided an impressive array of birds characteristic of arid grasslands (including skylarking Cassin’s Sparrows); a lunch stop at Paul and Betty Rae Davis’ private ranch followed (with still more vocal and invisible vireos), and the Davises’ generous hospitality extended even farther as we (along with the VENT group) were all their dinner guests at the unique and elegant Laurel Tree Restaurant.


….No, come to think of it, Ranger Amy’s philosophical view on reptiles doesn’t really apply to birding tours. This tour was a MBWeek and, as usual, it was a good one!



Itinerary


April 23 – Meet at IAH, with time for most at nearby Jesse Jones Park, then drive to Lufkin for the night; dinner at Ralph & Kacoo’s.


April 24 – Pre-dawn departure for Piney-Woods specialties along Boykin Springs Rd, Martin Dies State Park, Gore Store Rd, Big Thicket Visitors Center, and sod farm N of Nome; dinner at Al-T’s and first of 4 nights in Winnie.  


April 25 – French Rd rice paddies, Boy Scout Woods & Smith Oaks in High Island, and Bolivar Peninsula; dinner at Steve’s Landing.


April 26 – Anahuac NWR, Sabine Woods, and Tyrell Park; dinner at Tony’s Barbecue.


April 27 – FM 1986 & Anahuac NWR entrance, return to High Island and Bolivar Peninsula; dinner at Al-T’s.


April 28 – Liberty Municipal Park and Edith Moore Sanctuary; afternoon drive to Uvalde for the first of 3 nights; dinner at Herradero de Jalisco.


April 29 – Garner State Park, Lost Maples State Natural Area, birding & dinner at Neal’s Dining Room, and Frio Bat Cave.


April 30 – Cook’s Slough, Highway 55, and Paul & Betty Rae Davis’ property; dinner at Laurel Tree (as guests of Paul & Betty Rae).


May 1 – Drive to SAT for return flights home, plus visits to Frank Madla Park (more Golden-cheeked Warblers) and Crownridge Canyon with John, Brian, and Jeff who had later departures.



Bird List


• HI = High Island & vicinity (April 23-morning of April 28; incl Piney Woods/Big Thicket region)

• HC = Hill Country (late afternoon of April 2 -May 1)

  (species not annotated HI or HC were seen on both portions of MBWeek)


boldfaced species = “non-Minnesota” birds (i.e., absent, Accidental, or Casual in MN)


Black-bellied Whistling-Duck

Fulvous Whistling-Duck     HI

Wood Duck     HI

Mottled Duck     HI

Blue-winged Teal


Northern Bobwhite


Wild Turkey


Pied-billed Grebe     HI       


Neotropic Cormorant     HI   

Double-crested Cormorant     HI  


Anhinga     HI


American White Pelican

Brown Pelican     HI


American Bittern     HI

Least Bittern     HI

Great Blue Heron

Great Egret     HI     

Snowy Egret     HI

Little Blue Heron     HI

Tricolored Heron     HI

Reddish Egret     HI

Cattle Egret     HI  

Green Heron

Black-crowned Night-Heron     HI

Yellow-crowned Night-Heron     HI


White Ibis     HI

Glossy Ibis     HI

White-faced Ibis     HI

Roseate Spoonbill     HI


Black Vulture

Turkey Vulture


Osprey     HI


Swallow-tailed Kite     HI

White-tailed Kite     HI

Mississippi Kite     HI

Bald Eagle     HI

Northern Harrier     HI

Cooper’s Hawk     HI  

Harris’s Hawk     HC

White-tailed Hawk     HI

Red-shouldered Hawk

Broad-winged Hawk

Swainson’s Hawk

Red-tailed Hawk


Black Rail     HI (heard-only)

Clapper Rail     HI

King Rail     HI

Sora     HI (heard-only)

Purple Gallinule     HI

Common Gallinule     HI

American Coot


Black-necked Stilt     HI

American Avocet     HI


American Oystercatcher     HI


Black-bellied Plover     HI

American Golden-Plover     HI

Snowy Plover     HI

Wilson's Plover     HI

Semipalmated Plover     HI

Piping Plover     HI

Killdeer     HI


Spotted Sandpiper

Solitary Sandpiper     HI

Greater Yellowlegs     HI

Willet     HI

Lesser Yellowlegs     HI

Upland Sandpiper     HI

Whimbrel     HI

Long-billed Curlew     HI

Marbled Godwit     HI

Ruddy Turnstone     HI

Stilt Sandpiper     HI

Sanderling     HI

Dunlin     HI

Least Sandpiper     HI

White-rumped Sandpiper     HI

Pectoral Sandpiper     HI

Semipalmated Sandpiper     HI

Western Sandpiper     HI

Short-billed Dowitcher     HI

Long-billed Dowitcher     HI

Wilson’s Phalarope     HI


Laughing Gull     HI

Ring-billed Gull     HI

Herring Gull     HI

Least Tern     HI

Gull-billed Tern     HI

Caspian Tern     HI

Black Tern     HI

Common Tern     HI

Forster's Tern     HI

Royal Tern     HI

Sandwich Tern     HI

Black Skimmer     HI


Rock Pigeon

Eurasian Collared-Dove

Inca Dove

White-tipped Dove     HC (heard-only)

White-winged Dove

Mourning Dove


Black-billed Cuckoo     HI

Yellow-billed Cuckoo

Greater Roadrunner     HC


Great Horned Owl     HI


Common Nighthawk

Common Poorwill     HC (heard-only)

Chuck-will's-widow     HC (heard-only)


Chimney Swift


Ruby-throated Hummingbird     HI

Black-chinned Hummingbird     HC

    

Belted Kingfisher     HI

Green Kingfisher     HC


Red-headed Woodpecker     HI

Golden-fronted Woodpecker     HC

Red-bellied Woodpecker     HI

Ladder-backed Woodpecker     HC

Downy Woodpecker

Red-cockaded Woodpecker     HI

Northern Flicker

Pileated Woodpecker     HI


Crested Caracara

Peregrine Falcon     HI


Eastern Wood-Pewee

Acadian Flycatcher

Black Phoebe     HC      

Eastern Phoebe     HC     

Vermilion Flycatcher     HC

Ash-throated Flycatcher     HC      

Great Crested Flycatcher

Brown-crested Flycatcher     HC

Couch's Kingbird     HC

Western Kingbird       

Eastern Kingbird

Scissor-tailed Flycatcher


Loggerhead Shrike     HI


White-eyed Vireo

Bell’s Vireo     HC

Black-capped Vireo     HC

Yellow-throated Vireo

Hutton’s Vireo     HC

Warbling Vireo     HI

Philadelphia Vireo     HI

Red-eyed Vireo


Green Jay     HC

Blue Jay     HI

Western Scrub-Jay     HC

American Crow

Fish Crow     HI

Common Raven     HC


Horned Lark     HI


Purple Martin

Tree Swallow     HI

N. Rough-winged Swallow     HI

Cliff Swallow  

Cave Swallow     HC

Barn Swallow


Carolina Chickadee

Tufted Titmouse     HI

Black-crested Titmouse     HC


Verdin     HC


Brown-headed Nuthatch     HI


Canyon Wren     HC

House Wren     HC (heard-only)

Sedge Wren     HI (heard-only)

Marsh Wren     HI

Carolina Wren

Bewick's Wren     HC

Cactus Wren     HC


Blue-gray Gnatcatcher

Black-tailed Gnatcatcher     HC  


Eastern Bluebird     HI

Veery     HI

Gray-cheeked Thrush     HI

Swainson's Thrush     HI

Wood Thrush     HI  

American Robin     HI


Gray Catbird     HI

Curve-billed Thrasher     HC

Brown Thrasher     HI

Northern Mockingbird


European Starling


Cedar Waxwing


Ovenbird     HI

Louisiana Waterthrush     HC

Northern Waterthrush     HI

Blue-winged Warbler     HI

Black-and-white Warbler

Prothonotary Warbler     HI

Swainson's Warbler     HI

Tennessee Warbler     HI

Nashville Warbler     HC

Kentucky Warbler     HI

Common Yellowthroat     HI  

Hooded Warbler     HI

American Redstart     HI

Northern Parula     HI

Tropical Parula     HC

Magnolia Warbler     HI

Bay-breasted Warbler     HI

Blackburnian Warbler     HI

Yellow Warbler

Chestnut-sided Warbler     HI

Blackpoll Warbler     HI

Pine Warbler     HI

Yellow-rumped Warbler     HC

Yellow-throated Warbler

Prairie Warbler     HI

Golden-cheeked Warbler     HC

Black-throated Green Warbler     HI

Yellow-breasted Chat


Olive Sparrow     HC

Rufous-crowned Sparrow     HC    

Canyon Towhee     HC     

Cassin’s Sparrow     HC

Bachman's Sparrow     HI

Chipping Sparrow     HC    

Clay-colored Sparrow     HC

Field Sparrow     HC (heard-only)

Lark Sparrow     HC

Black-throated Sparrow     HC

Savannah Sparrow     HI

Grasshopper Sparrow     HC

Nelson's Sparrow     HI

Seaside Sparrow     HI

Lincoln's Sparrow

Swamp Sparrow     HI

White-crowned Sparrow     HC


Summer Tanager    

Scarlet Tanager     HI

Western Tanager     HI

Northern Cardinal

Rose-breasted Grosbeak     HI

Blue Grosbeak

Indigo Bunting

Painted Bunting

Dickcissel


Red-winged Blackbird  

Eastern Meadowlark     HI

Common Grackle     HI

Boat-tailed Grackle     HI

Great-tailed Grackle     

Bronzed Cowbird     HC

Brown-headed Cowbird       

Orchard Oriole    

Baltimore Oriole     HI

Scott’s Oriole     HC


House Finch

American Goldfinch     HI


House Sparrow

  

A partial list of signs (compiled by Mary):


Goody Goody Liquor Store

Joy Juice Liquor Store

Best Coffee on the Interstate (on back of gasoline truck)

Broken Life Repair Shop (Baptist Church)

Casters & Blasters Ministry to Outdoorsmen

Cowboys for Christ

Red Neck Snack Shack

Redneck Riviera RV Park

Dust Bunnies Corner

Buy Shrimp Here. I Need Money.

Pyroshack Fireworks

Happy Chaps Exxon


Fulvous Whistling-Duck, Anahuac NWR (2014, KRE photo)

Roseate Spoonbill, Smith Oaks (2016, KRE photo)

Mississippi Kite, Liberty Municipal Park (2016, KRE photo)

King Rail, Anahuac NWR (2014, KRE photo)

Clapper Rails, Bolivar Peninsula (2016, Jeff Stephenson photo)

Zone-tailed Hawk, Chalk Bluff Park (2014, Jeff Stephenson photo)

     

Purple Gallinule, Smith Oaks (2016, Jeff Stephenson photo)

Least Tern, Bolivar Peninsula (2014, KRE photo)

Wilson's Plover, Sea Rim State Park (2014, Roy Zimmerman photo)

American Oystercatcher, Bolivar Peninsula (2012, KRE photo)

Red-cockaded Woodpecker, Jasper CR-54 (2014, Jeff Stephenson photo)

Brown-crested Flycatcher, Cook's Slough (2014, Jeff Stephenson photo)

Black-capped Vireo, Neal's Lodge (2014, Jeff Stephenson photo)

Brown-headed Nuthatch, Boykin Springs Rd (2016, Jeff Stephenson photo)

Swainson's Warbler, Taylor’s Bayou (2012, KRE photo)

Tropical Parula, Neal’s Lodge (2012, KRE photo)

Golden-cheeked Warbler, Davis' ranch (2014, Roy Zimmerman photo)

Rufous-capped Warbler, Chalk Bluff Park (2014, Jeff Stephenson photo)

Seaside Sparrow, Bolivar Peninsula (2014, Roy Zimmerman photo)

Painted Bunting (2016, Jeff Stephenson photo)