PO Box 9021, Wilmington, DE 19809, USA
E-mail: font@focusonnature.com
Phone: Toll-free in USA, Canada, & Puerto Rico 1-800-721-9986
 or 302/529-1876; Fax: 302/529-1085

 

HIGHLIGHTS FROM OUR PAST BIRDING & NATURE TOURS
in 2004 
 
With tour narratives, photos, comments by participants, and links to lists of birds & other nature found during specific tours
 

INCLUDED IN THIS FILE ARE TOURS THAT WERE IN:  ARGENTINA, BRAZIL, CHILE, the CARIBBEAN (ST. VINCENT & BARBADOS), JAPAN (late-fall), and PANAMA. 
& IN THE U.S. IN: CALIFORNIA & WASHINGTON STATE & PELAGIC TRIPS OFFSHORE FROM NEW JERSEY & NEW YORK.


Other recent tours in: the CARIBBEAN (ST. VINCENT & BARBADOS), GUATEMALA, JAPAN (spring & winter), and PANAMA
& IN THE U.S. IN: COLORADO, KANSAS, NEW MEXICO, NORTH CAROLINA, TEXAS, WYOMING, & PELAGIC TRIPS OFFSHORE FROM NEW JERSEY & NEW YORK 
in: Highlights from Past Tours in 2004 from Jun '04 back thru Jan '04


The following tour summaries are given with the most-recent tours first. Click the link for  tours you find of interest.
In the summaries, there are further links to UPCOMING TOUR ITINERARIES, BIRD-LISTS, and PHOTO GALLERIES

Links to particular tour highlights - from there, links to bird-lists:


Japan - December 2004

The above tour with Blakiston's Fish-Owl, both Steller's & White-tailed Eagles, 5 species of cranes, Black-faced Spoonbil, and Copper Pheasant. Also on the island of Amami: the Amami Woodcock, Lidth's Jay, Amami Thrush, Ryukyu Robin, and the rare Asian (or Swinhoe's) Yellow Rail.

Chile (central: a Pacific pelagic and up to the Andes) - November 2004

In '04, a short-tour as an extension after Argentina. With albatrosses on the Pacific and Andean condor in the mountains. Among the endemic birds we saw, the Crag Chila & the Moustached Turca.
In '05, we'll be doing the longer, complete Chile tour again - south to Tierra del Fuego, and north to Arica, at the Peruvian border. 

Argentina (north-central & southern) - November 2004

The above tour is in a land where a cardinal is yellow and a meadowlark is red. 
As many as 3 types of mockingbirds can sing at the same place. Also In that area,  there are flocks of colorful Patagonian Conures, perhaps better known as Burrowing Parrots. Other birds during our tour were: Rusty-backed Monjita, Carbonated Sierra-Finch (a sparkler), Cinnamon Warbling-Finch, Tucuman Mountain-Finch, and Rufous-throated Dipper. All of these, endemic to Argentina, except the dipper, which is nearly so.
Marine Mammals we saw along the Patagonian coast included Southern Right Whales in the sounds, and Killer Whales (or Orcas) in the surf.         

Brazil (the far-south: Rio Grande do Sul, and Mato Grosso, and the southeast) - October 2004

The above tour with Harpy Eagle in Mato Grosso. That bird, the largest of the world's raptors. Also we saw the largest of the toucans, and the largest of the macaws: the Toco Toucan, and the Hyacinth Macaw. Brazil, the largest of South American countries, is a land of superlatives for birds.   

West Coast USA (Washington State & central California) - September 2004

The above tour with 4 species of alcids & a pod of orcas seen well from a boat in the Puget Sound. 
In the Cascades: Three-toed Woodpecker, Gray Jay, & Pine Grosbeak. Futher east, Blue Grouse. 
In central Californina, two incredible fields with thousands of Long-billed Curlews & White-faced Ibises.  

Pelagic Trip from Barnegat Light, NJ - September 2004

The above trip with 3 species of shearwaters, 2 species of jaegers (Pomarine & Long-tailed, 3 of the latter), 2 species of phalaropes, and a mammal that FLEW onto the boat! A Silver-haired Bat. (A photo of the bat is with the narrative.)    

Panama - August 2004

The above tour with antbirds, other birds, & other nature on Barro Colorado Island. 
Overall, a fine assortment of tropical birds: toucans & trogons, motmots & manakins, & more.  

Brazil (Iguacu Falls, Mato Grosso, & the Southeast) - July/August 2004

The above tour with Harpy Eagle in Mato Grosso. That bird, the largest of the world's raptors. Also we saw the largest of the toucans, and the largest of the macaws: the Toco Toucan, and the Hyacinth Macaw. Brazil, the largest of South American countries, is a land of superlatives for birds.   

The Caribbean: St. Vincent & Barbados - July 2004

The above tour was one done in response to a request, for some who were not able to go to the Caribbean in the spring. On St. Vincent, we once again saw the bird endemics and specialties.
Barbados, although a small island without varied habitat, is still interesting in that because it is the easternmost of the Antilles, shorebirds migrating from north to south stop there during their journey. Such shorebird migration occurs mostly in July and August. Most of the shorebirds that visit the island come, of course, from North America. But, on a regular basis, there are strays from the other side of the Atlantic, from Europe. During our tour, we saw 2 such species: a Wood Sandpiper among Yellowlegs, and a Reeve (a female Ruff). 
Barbados is also interesting in that another European bird has arrived there and become established, the Little Egret. At a heronry we visited, Little & Snowy Egrets were nesting next to each other, with about as many Littles as there were Snowys.   

North Carolina Landbirding - June 2004

This tour, an annual for years, has been a short one, only a few days, designed for "Southern US bird specialties", such as the Red-cockaded Woodpecker, Swainson's Warbler, Bachman's Sparrow, Painted Bunting, and Wilson's Plover.
The link here goes to a narrative that only tells of the birds and other wildlife during the tour, but also relates the story of birds that are "Carolinean". Over a dozen species have Carolina in either their common or scientific names. In relation to other nature, that also applies to a turtle, toad, anole, and squirrel. 
There are 5 species of birds (other than recent "splits", and California's Yellow-billed Magpie and Condor) that are endemic to the "Lower 48", We saw all of them during this tour. Read the narrative relating to these 5 species, the 12-plus "Carolinean Birds", and an overview of Carolinean ornithological history.
             

Japan, Spring Birding - May 2004

This tour was on the main Japanese island of Honshu, and the small, very small, offshore island of Hegura, where there's a BIG migration of birds in the spring. During our 3 days on Hegura, thousands of migrants came through, of numerous species. Among them, birds more normally seen in mainland Asia than in Japan, such as: Swinhoe's Robin, Mugimaki Flycatcher, Yellow-rumped Flycatcher, Black-naped Oriole, Chestnut Bunting, and Tristram's Bunting. The Japanese Murrelet was seen from the ferry between Honshu and Hegura.           

West Texas & New Mexico - April/May 2004

During this tour we had excellent looks at 2 of the west Texas bird specialties, the Colima Warbler and Lucifer Hummingbird. As we were watching the warbler sing its song in a low treetop, an animal known as a Ringtail was, from an outcropping of rocks nearly at our feet, watching us. 
Other birds that we watched during the tour included: Common Black Hawk, both Varied & Painted Buntings, both Mountain & Western Bluebirds, both Gambel's and Scaled Quails, and those 2 birds whose name begins with the letter "p": Phainopepla and Pyrrhuloxia. Enjoyable during the tour were encounters with Roadrunners, and the flowering plants that were blooming in the desert.           

Colorado & adjacent Kansas & Wyoming - April 2004

This tour is designed to see grouse at their lekking grounds, where they perform early in the morning. For us, in April '04, these included the 2 Prairie-Chickens, the Sharp-tailed, Blue, Greater Sage, and Gunnison Sage Grouse. Each species, and each morning, presented a different experience. Grouse are not the only birds during this tour, as we skirted around the beautiful state of Colorado, and dipped into some of the adjacent states. Among the other birds: Mountain Plover, McCown's & Chestnut-collared Longspurs, and    Rosy-Finches. Among the mammals: Moose (we saw 10). Interesting was a spot we visited in far-eastern Colorado for Harris' Sparrow, where we also found, after some weather with strong winds, birds from the East including Worm-eating Warbler & Northern Parula (both out of range), & Cardinal, Brown Thrasher, and Red-bellied Woodpecker, not normally thought of as "Colorado birds".          

Panama - March/April 2004

During this tour, there was the Resplendent Quetzal, Three-wattled Bellbird, and an assortment of other birds in the highlands of Chiriqui. 

Puerto Rico - March 2004
& the Lesser Antilles (St. Lucia, St. Vincent, Dominica) - Feb/Mar 2004

During this tour in Puerto Rico, we saw one of the rarest birds in the world, the Puerto Rican Parrot. We only saw 1, but there were, at that time, only about 30 in the wild. The parrot is 1 of 14 birds endemic to Puerto Rico. During the tour, we found all of them, plus 2 quasi-endemics, that also occur (or have occurred) in the nearby Virgin Islands: the Puerto Rican Flycatcher & Puerto Rican Screech-Owl. If the owl's still in the Virgin Islands, it's very rare there. But where we stay in the hills of Puerto Rico, it's still common, calling through the night.    

Our tour in the Lesser Antilles was one not for the "Pirates of the Caribbean", but for the "Parrots of the Caribbean". Each of the 3 Lesser Antillean islands that we visited have endemic Amazon parrots: St. Lucia, St. Vincent, and Dominica. The last of these actually has two: the Red-necked & the rare Imperial Parrot, known respectively on the island as the "Jaco" & the "Sisserou". But there was an avian pirate observed during the tour: A frigatebird robbing terns of fish. 
At sunset, the "green flash" was seen from all 3 Lesser Antillean islands.  

IN 2006, CARIBBEAN TOURS ARE SCHEDULED AGAIN FOR JAMAICA AND THE DOMINCIAN REPUBLIC. Lists of birds from previous tours there are linked to the itineraries.        

Costa Rica (southern) - February 2004

During this tour, there were over 25 species of hummingbirds. 5 species of them were seen on their nests in the forest, including the White-tipped Sicklebill. Among the other birds: Resplendent Quetzal, Scarlet Macaw, Turquoise Cotinga, Pearl Kite, Striped Owl, and Orange-collared Manakins at a lek.      

Japan - January 2004

During this tour, highlights, among others, included the Blakiston's Fish-Owl, both White-tailed and Steller's Sea-Eagles, and among 6 species of cranes, the Siberian Crane.

Guatemala - Dec '03/Jan '04

During this tour, some of the highlights were a pair of Orange-breasted Falcons, a displaying Pheasant Cuckoo, Resplendent Quetzal, and Pink-headed Warbler. 

 

Japan Late Fall/Early Winter Birding Tour (to Honshu, Hokkaido, Kyushu, & Amami)
December 2004

Links:

A Photo Gallery of Japanese Culture & Scenery, from our Dec '04 Tour

Upcoming Japan Tour Itineraries

This tour (our 23rd birding tour in Japan) was a good one, with lots of nice birds, and some wonderful culture and scenery, in a land very different for most of us. We went to the Japanese islands of Honshu, Hokkaido, Kyushu, and Amami.

Between Honshu & Hokkaido, on the western side of the
northern Pacific Ocean, on November 30th, overnight pelagic trip, onboard a large ferry.  During our Japanese tours, over a dozen years, we've done about 15 such ferry-pelagics, mostly in January, but also in May, June, November, and December.

This time, there were no albatrosses (Laysan is nearly always seen, and both Black-footed and Short-tailed have also been), but there were a number of SEABIRDS. 
The most common, this time, was the Black-legged Kittiwake. They occurred all-day. In all, there were thousands . Other Gulls included Slaty-backed, Glaucous-winged, Black-tailed , and Vega.  
Pomarine Jaegers
were with us throughout the day. 
In one area, there was a nice number of Shearwaters, mostly Streaked, but also Short-tailed.. Other oceanic birds were: Northern Fulmar, Fork-tailed Storm-Petrel, Red-necked Phalarope, Pacifc Loon, and both Pelagic and Temminck's Cormorants
Alcids were the Rhinoceros Auklet and Ancient Murrelet.

During another pelagic trip, along that ferry-route earlier this year, in
January, off the northern coast of Honshu, in a blustery wind, a Gyrfalcon flew by the boat. This time, in the same area, on November 30th, a day much calmer, a Short-eared Owl flew toward us and circled the boat, before continuing on its migration south.

Such birding at sea is always with the unexpected. It's fun, and particularly pleasant, whether the ocean be either calm or rough, on such a large ferry in the western Pacific.

There is now a new, and informative, feature elsewhere in our website entitled "Rare Birds of Japan", relating to birds that have been mentioned here, and others. 
Whether you've seen the birds or not (or whether or not you ever will), it's interesting reading. And particularly so, in the "further notes" section, are the narratives regarding the Short-tailed Albatross (a bird that came back from very brink of extinction), the Siberian Crane (one of the most threatened of all birds), and the Blakiston's Fish-Owl (one of the most mysterious of birds, as it lives secretly in a remote area).

Also new in our website, there's another feature that's really worth a look. It's a "Photographic Sampling of Japanese Culture & Scenery", a series of photos taken by one of the Canadian participants on our December 2004 Japan tour. The photographs are not only beautiful, but quite interesting. 

The December '04 tour was, as noted above, a very good one for birds. Some of the highlights were on the southern island of Kyushu, where between 2 and 3 thousand exquisite Mandarin Ducks were seen, and where we had a good look at the Copper Pheasant (a Japanese endemic that can be hard to see!)

During the December '04 Japan tour, many of the rarities that we had hoped to see were. Among those, with information in the file mentioned above, the "Rare Birds of Japan" were: Amami Thrush, Black-faced Spoonbill, Blakiston's Fish-Owl, Steller's Sea-Eagle, Red-crowned Crane, White-naped Crane, Hooded Crane, Amami Woodcock, Lidth's Jay, White-tailed Eagle, Copper Pheasant, and Ryukyu Robin.

A Photo Gallery of Japanese Culture & Scenery, from our Dec '04 Tour

Upcoming Japan Tour Itineraries

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Chile (central: a Pacific pelagic and up to the Andes) 
November 2004

Links:

List of Birds & Other Wildlife during our Chile Tour in Nov '04 

Cumulative List of Birds during our Chile Tours 1990-2004

Upcoming Chile Tour Itineraries

During our annual FONT birding tour in Chile, in November 2004, we conducted on November 15th our 15th pelagic trip to Humboldt Current waters offshore from Valparaiso.

This time, we probably saw MORE SEABIRDS during the trip than we have during any other. The vast majority of them, SOOTY SHEARWATERS.

As we left shore, there were swarms of birds ahead of us on the horizon. We headed in that direction, and soon we were among them, in masses of SOOTY SHEARWATERS all around us. Mostly they were in their swift flight. The experience was incredible. As we plowed through, there were also large flocks of PHALAROPES sitting on the water and flying (mostly RED, some RED-NECKED). Big flocks flew by FRANKLIN'S GULLS. As we continued, and the numbers of SOOTY SHEARWATERS around us began to decrease, those of PINK-FOOTED SHEARWATERS increased. There were thousands of them.

Our estimates were "a hundred thousand" or more SOOTY SHEARWATERS,
5,000 or more PINK-FOOTED SHEARWATERS,
2,000 or more FRANKLIN'S GULLS,
and 3,000 PHALAROPES (about 10 to 1, RED to RED-NECKED)

And, there were other SEABIRDS, particularly as we "chummed" by tossing out from the boat fish-parts and fish oil.
We were surrounded, as we did that, by ALBATROSSES, GIANT-PETRELS, PINTADOS (or CAPE PETRELS), WHITE-CHINNED PETRELS, STORM-PETRELS, BOOBIES ,FULMARS, GULLS, TERNS and PELICANS.
A single PERUVIAN DIVING-PETREL flew by.
The ALBATROSSES (or MOLLYMAWKS) were BLACK-BROWED (10) and the SALVIN'S (6).
There were 12 CAPE PETRELS, 3 SOUTHERN FULMARS, 6 SOUTHERN GIANT-PETRELS, and 50 WHITE-CHINNED.
Attracted to the chum slick were over 30 WILSON'S STORM-PETRELS. Numbers by the boat of PERUVIAN BOOBIES and PERUVIAN (or CHILEAN) PELICANS were also about 30 each. There were about 20 SOUTH AMERICAN TERNS and 10 INCA TERNS. KELP GULLS were about 200 around us.

With all the birds, it was odd not to get a species less common for Chile, as we often have in the past. These would those such as the Westland Petrel,  another species of albatross, a skua, or Little Shearwater.

With the ocean swells as they were, we could not go further west to a "belt" where we might have gotten the pterodromas, the Masatierra (or DeFilippi's) Petrel or the Juan Fernandez Petrel.

But even so, it was a tremendous trip (those 4 hours or so) that morning with the masses of oceanic birds. Quite an experience, for sure!

And interesting to think about how we all came together from different places in the world.
Those of us on the boat (in addition to the Chilean crew) were from various parts of the US and from the UK.
Among those birds around us, the SALVIN'S ALBATROSSES were visitors from many miles across the Pacific in New Zealand where they nest. The SOOTY SHEARWATERS had journeyed thousands miles around the Pacific on their way back to breeding sites in the Southern Hemisphere. The PINK-FOOTED SHEARWATERS which breed on Chilean offshore islands had also just been far away in the Pacific. The PHALAROPES had nested earlier in the year in the far-northern tundra of Canada and Alaska. The FRANKLIN'S GULLS did so on the inland plains of North America.

And yet all these birds were with us, totaling thousands of individuals, on November 15, 2004, off the coast of central Chile!

List of Birds & Other Wildlife during our Chile Tour in Nov '04 

Upcoming Chile Tour Itineraries

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Argentina (north-central & southern)
November 2004

List of Birds & Other Wildlife during our Argentina Tour in Nov '04 

Upcoming Argentina Tour Itineraries

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Brazil (the far-south: Rio Grande do Sul, and Mato Grosso, and the southeast)
October 2004

Links:

List of Birds & Other Wildlife during our Brazil Oct '04 Tour

Upcoming Brazil Tour Itineraries

During our October 2004 FONT birding tour in the far-southern Brazilian state of Rio Grande do Sul, some oceanic birds were seen on the South Atlantic Ocean. However, they were not seen offshore, but from shore. And from where we could walk, that's right, walk, from shore.

There's a long jetty, of rocks and concrete, that extends over 2 kilometers into the ocean, from a beach by an inlet. SOUTHERN SEA-LIONS and BOTTLE-NOSED DOLPHINS, feeding by the jetty, indicated that in the waters there were fish. Fishermen camped on the jetty indicated that as well. And so there would also be SEABIRDS.

The most common of which at the end of the jetty were WILSON'S STORM-PETRELS, with their dangling feet behind them as they fed on the smooth water surface. There were about 50 of them, where GREAT GREBES were diving for fish beneath the surface.
And of course, there were GULLS, mostly KELP. 

But, as we later drove along the beach, south from the jetty, there were yet more birds, among them TERNS (7 species SOUTH AMERICAN, COMMON, SNOWY-CROWNED, CAYENNE, ROYAL, YELLOW-BILLED, and ANTARCTIC).
And PARASITIC JAEGERS were sitting on the beach, both the dark and light morphs. They stayed, tamely, as we watched them from the windows of our vehicle.
We drove further. We almost could have driven indefinitely, but we stopped where just offshore, beyond the surf, there were fishing boats, and with them, soaring BLACK-BROWED ALBATROSSES and WHITE-CHINNED PETRELS.

Certainly, not a bad oceanic day, without ever having been on a boat!

List of Birds & Other Wildlife during our Brazil Oct '04 Tour

Upcoming Brazil Tour Itineraries

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West Coast USA (Washington State & central California)
September 2004

List of Birds during our West Coast USA Tour - Sept. '04

Upcoming West Coast USA Tour Itinerary for Sept. '05

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Panama
August, 2004

List of Birds during our Panama Tour - August '04

Upcoming Panama Tour Itineraries

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Pelagic Trip from Barnegat Light, NJ
September 12, 2004

Links:

Upcoming East Coast Pelagic Trips

Our annual FONT late-summer pelagic trip to the Hudson Canyon, off New Jersey & New York, took place overnight on September 11/12, 2004. The consensus was "a great trip". Our thanks to the captain, his wife (for our always-appreciated food spread), our leaders, and particularly our participants.

The water temperature out at the Hudson Canyon was about 71 degrees. It was a beautiful day with calm waters.

Among the bird highlights were 3 juvenile LONG-TAILED JAEGERS (in close!), including 2 together on the way back about 40 miles offshore sitting on the very calm water where there lots of jellyfish.

There were good numbers of CORY'S SHEARWATERS around trawlers. 2 AUDUBON'S SHEARWATERS were seen, as were 2 GREATER SHEARWATERS.

There were both RED-NECKED and RED PHALAROPES. A MERLIN was seen attacking phalaropes on the water.
There only landbird was a female AMERICAN REDSTART which landed on the boat.

But the "star of the day", and a "life mammal" for most on board, was a SILVER-HAIRED BAT (photo below). It was first noticed flying above the boat at about 10:30am. It landed on the top of the cabin, and was identified by an experienced "bat-man" as a Silver-haired. The bat then took off only to land on the beard of one of the birders onboard. It flew again and landed atop another participant's head, with the back of the bat's head underneath the brim of the person's hat. "A bat in the hat!" The bat was gently removed and placed on a gear bag on the upper deck (as in the photograph below). The bat climbed to the inner portion of the bag and stayed there through the remainder of the voyage. Once back on shore, it was placed on the tire of an abandoned trailer, and seemed content.
The SILVER-HAIRED BAT was first seen about 70 miles offshore. It is one of just a few species of bats that migrate long distances sometimes out over the ocean. RED BATS have been seen during previous pelagic trips, but for us, this SILVER-TAILED was a first.  


A Silver-haired Bat that came on our boat
70 miles offshore from New Jersey on Sept. 12, 2004.
(Photograph by Jonathan Klizas)

Marine mammals during our Sep 12 '04 trip included COMMON (or SADDLEBACK) DOLPHINS, and RISSO'S DOLPHINS (also known as GRAY GRAMPUS).

Birds seen offshore during our Sep 12 '04 from Barnegat Light NJ included:
  
Cory's Shearwaters - 150
Greater Shearwater - 2
Audubon's Shearwaters - 2
Wilson's Storm-Petrels - 300
Red-necked Phalaropes - 25
Red Phalaropes - 2 
Pomarine Jaegers - 3
Long-tailed Jaegers - 3
South Polar Skua - 1
Lesser Black-backed Gulls - 2
Merlin -1 
American Redstart - 1

Mammals:

Common Dolphin - 6
Risso's Dolphin - 6
Silver-haired Bat - 1

Upcoming East Coast Pelagic Trips

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Brazil (Iguacu Falls, Mato Grosso, & the Southeast)
July/August 2004 
(with some notes regarding our subsequent tour in October '04)

Links:

List of Birds & Other Wildlife during our Brazil Jul/Aug '04 Tour

Upcoming Brazil Tour Itineraries

 
This July/August tour was the first of two for us in Brazil in 2004, during which we saw the Harpy Eagle. Actually, there was one particular young bird that we were to see two times in the same area of a nest in a southern Mato Grosso forest. The second tour was two months later, in October. 
It was quite interesting to see how the young bird, that was already large in August, had increased in size by October. 
In August, when it stood on a branch up in a huge tree, the immature Harpy appeared to dwarf a nearby Gray-lined Hawk standing on a branch of another tree. The young Harpy Eagle, stayed in just about the same area, in a large tree or two, during both of our visits, in August & October. During the August tour, we also saw the adult female Harpy, in the top of another huge tree in nearby forest.
During both tours, in August and in October, the young bird begged loudly for food. We never saw the adult come to the nest, but we knew it recently had, as during the second day of our stay in the area, the youngster was observed tearing apart its meal and eating it. When the begged, it gave a single call, repeatedly, that could be heard far away from the bird. At times, the bird gave consecutively as many as 25 to 30 calls. In a telescope (or even binoculars), during each call, the red coloration inside its mouth could be seen. Each time it called, the big young bird elastically moved its wings, up and down. Both of our experiences with the Harpy Eagle (in August & in October) were tremendous.

As noted, the Harpy Eagle, when still young, was already a very big bird. The female of the species is the largest of the world's raptors. Overall, the species is the most powerful of birds. A massive Harpy Eagle can weigh nearly 20 pounds (about twice the weight of the Bald Eagle of North America). Prey includes monkeys, sloths, and porcupines. For those creatures in particular, but also in a general sense, the Harpy Eagle is undoubtedly the world's most formidable bird. 

The Harpy Eagle is seldom seen soaring high above the treetops in the forest. It habitually enters is nest, high in the tallest trees, from below. The short, broad wings of the bird enables almost vertical movement through the trees. The nest is a platform of large sticks, initially about 4 feet across and 2 feet thick. More is added to it in later years, getting it up 5 feet in diameter and 4 feet thick.

A juvenile, when between 8 and 10 months of age, enter its first immature molt, and has a well-developed power of flight. However, at that age, (as the was bird we saw in October), it is still entirely dependent on adults for food. Such a young bird generally stays in its nesting territory, within a radius of 100 yards of the nest tree. That large tree is used by the youngster for its perching. 

About a half-hour after sunrise, a juvenile bird begins calling. If especially hungry, it flaps its wings, as it calls, perhaps "signaling" to its parent. (In the first paragraph here, this repetitive calling & signaling was referred to.) Food is not brought by the adult every day. Sometimes, it comes as infrequently as once in 5 days. Later, as the parent feeds the young bird even less, the young Harpy Eagle's food-begging call changes to a combination of a "scream" and a pathetic "whine". The long period of dependence of a juvenile on its parents suggest that adults nest not annually but in a cycle of a year and a half to two years. A new bird when grown must find its own territory. As noted above, a pair of Harpy Eagles can use a nest repeatedly.

We look forward to having a "Harpy Experience", as we did twice in '04, repeatedly as well.                            
               

List of Birds & Other Wildlife during our Brazil Jul/Aug '04 Tour

Upcoming Brazil Tour Itineraries

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The Caribbean: Barbados & St. Vincent
July 2004

Links:

List of Birds & Other Wildlife during our Caribbean '04 Tours

Upcoming Caribbean Tour Itineraries

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North CarolinA LANDBIRDING 
June 2004

Links:

Cumulative List of Birds & Other Wildlife during our North Carolina Tours

Upcoming North Carolina Tour Itineraries

The following account written by Armas Hill, leader of the tour. 

"Nothing much Finer than Birding in Carolina"

Since 1992, during the late-spring, FONT has conducted a land-birding tour in eastern North Carolina for bird specialties. And with good reason, as it is, and has been for a long time, a great place for birds and for those who have either studied or enjoyed them.

We were there again this year, June 7-11, 2004, when we visited basically 3 regions including the river-bottom forest of the upper Neuse Valley, the pine-woods and other habitats of the central North Carolina coast, and areas of the northern Outer Banks. Roanoke Island, and the nearby mainland.

Due to the Carolinas' role in ornithological history, a number of birds have been actually become identified as "Carolinean". Probably more birds are in that category than even many bird enthusiasts realize.
Obvious are the CAROLINA CHICKADEE and the CAROLINA WREN.
And such identification has normally becomes permanent. In one case, that of the CAROLINA PARAKEET, the name has unfortunately outlived the bird.

Other birds labeled "Carolinean" may not as quickly come to mind, particularly those with the reference in their scientific names.
Such as:
Caprimulgus carolinensis, the CHUCK-WILL'S-WIDOW,
Sitta carolinensis, the WHITE-BREASTED NUTHATCH,
Melanerpes carolinus, the RED-BELLIED WOODPECKER,
Dumetella carolinensis, the GRAY CATBIRD,
Pelecanus occidentalis carolinensis, the BROWN PELICAN,
Pandion haliaetus carolinensis, the OSPREY,
Zenaida macroura carolinensus, the MOURNING DOVE,
and one of the birds with "Carolina" in its common name also has the reference in its scientific nomenclature the CAROLINA CHICKADEE is Parus carolinensis.

All of the birds noted here so far were seen during our June 7-11, 2004 North Carolina landbirding tour (with the exception, of course, of the CAROLINA PARAKEET).

And the above list of birds with a Carolinean name identity is not exhaustive. There are more:
Porzana carolina, the SORA,
Euphagus carolinus, the RUSTY BLACKBIRD,
Junco hyemalis carolinensis, a subspecies of the DARK-EYED JUNCO,
and Anas crecca carolinensis, what has been the American form of the GREEN-WINGED TEAL. If considered distinct from the Eurasian form, the separate species would be Anas carolinensis.

And, interestingly, some forms of wildlife other than birds that are named "Carolinean" include:
Terrapene carolina, the EASTERN BOX TURTLE,
Anolis carolinensis, the CAROLINA ANOLE,
and in the mammal-department, one that's familiar (maybe too familiar) to all of us:
Sciurus carolinensis, the EASTERN GRAY SQUIRREL!

And yet one more creature labeled "Carolinean" was one that we heard during twilight in pinelands, where BACHMAN'S SPARROWS sang and RED-COCKADED WOODPECKERS nested. The sound was lamb-like, a nasal "baaa", that came from the EASTERN NARROWMOUTH TOAD, Gastrophyrne carolinensis.  

But, regarding birds, part of the reason why there's so much Carolinean in names is because there was so much early exploration and bird study that took place in the beginning days of what's now North & South Carolina.
And in the early 1700's, that was prior to the standardization, as we now know it, of common, and particularly scientific, names.

The renowned Swedish taxonomist, Carolus Linnaenus, had much to do with that standardizing, in a global sense. His major accomplishment, the publication of his "Systema Naturae" was in 1758. In it, for example, a common bird of the Carolinas, the MOCKINGBIRD, was described. Others were later. For example, it was in 1766 that Linnaenus described the CATBIRD as Dumetella carolinensis.

Much about the early Carolinean avifauna was included in the work published in 1731 by Mark Catesby, entitled the "A Natural History of the Carolinas, Florida, & the Bahamas". Volumes sold in England at 2 guineas each.

Catesby referred to the work by two men who, when in North Carolina, contributed much to early American ornithology, John White and John Lawson.

John White was the first to draw American birds extensively (he drew 32 species). His work was in a book by John Lawson entitled "A New Voyage to Carolina", published in 1709.
White actually made 4 voyages to the New World. On the second, in 1587, he went as the governor of 150 settlers at Sir Walter Raleigh's colony on Roanoke Island, North Carolina.
(We stayed one overnight on that island during our June '04 tour.)

When John White was on Roanoke Island, his daughter and her husband, were parents to the first English child born in America, Virginia Dare. Thereafter, John White had to leave Roanoke Island to go to England. When he returned to Roanoke Island in 1590, he found little trace of the colony and none of the colonists who stayed when he left.
A listing of the 32 bird species drawn by John White is in a feature elsewhere in this web-site: North Carolina Birds & Other Wildlife

John Lawson, the author of the book "A New Voyage to Carolina" in 1709, was, prior to that, a co-founder of North Carolina's oldest town, a place named Bath. His book was the first major attempt at a natural history in the New World. It became popular in Europe because of its vivid descriptions of the North American Indians and their customs, but in it also were good descriptions of newly-found birds and animals. Over 100 species of birds were noted in the book, and a listing of them (with names given by Lawson) are in the North Carolina feature elsewhere in this web-site, just referred to above. 

In 1711, Lawson was in a party exploring, in North Carolina, the Neuse River, determining how far inland it was navigable. During that venture, he was killed by Indians.
(During our '04 tour, some of our best birding was in the upper Neuse River Valley, particularly at a wonderful reserve called Howell Woods.)

The feeders at Howell are a wonderful place to nicely see some attractive birds indeed. Those feeders there are somehow without Grackles, Starlings, and the like. Rather, there are (and were for us) RED-HEADED WOODPECKERS (& 2 other woodpecker species), EASTERN BLUEBIRDS (called BLEW BIRDS in the days of White, Lawson, and Catesby), along with BROWN-HEADED NUTHATCH (and the WHITE-BREASTED NUTHATCH, remember, Sitta carolinensis). Bright and colorful AMERICAN GOLDFINCHES and CARDINALS were there in numbers, as a male SUMMER TANAGER was not far away (called the "SUMMER RED-BIRD" by Catesby). Added to the avian mix were CHIPPING SPARROWS and BROWN THRASHER. A NORTHERN BOBWHITE walked through the feeder area. Nearby, GREAT CRESTED FLYCATCHERS were nesting in a tree-hole. Maybe a dozen RUBY-THROATED HUMMINGBIRDS were coming to the feeders, with the brilliant gorget of the male, up close, just dazzling.
It was a nice place to sit in the shade and simply enjoy the birds.

The assortment of habitats throughout the Howell property contain a large number of birds to be enjoyed. At the edges of the woods, there were both BLUE GROSBEAKS and INDIGO BUNTINGS. In the woods, there are numerous WARBLERS (about a dozen species breed) including PROTHONOTARY, HOODED, KENTUCKY, and SWAINSON'S.

But it was a bird most apt to be seen in the sky that we sought to see, and did the MISSISSIPPI KITE, a raptor that when aerial can be acrobatic catching insects, particularly dragonflies. This area of the upper Neuse valley has been good for us for the MISSISSIPPI KITE over the years.

This year (2004), north of North Carolina, for whatever reason, MISSISSIPPI KITES have been causing enjoyment for a number of birders in places such as Maryland and New Jersey. Maybe due to the 17-year CICADA, maybe not.

During our tour in North Carolina, we encountered no 17-year CICADAS (when they were locally common to the north). But we did see at Howell, in addition to the KITES (which nest there), a large number of various DRAGONFLIES (see list elsewhere in our web-site).

An aside for a moment regarding the name MISSISSIPPI KITE it's really not as common in Mississippi as it is other places. It's most common, during the North American summer, in the Central US, in Oklahoma for example. During the Southern American summer, that's where it is.

Some other birds with common names relating to a place where the bird is not as common as it is elsewhere include the CONNECTICUT WARBLER and PHILADELPHIA VIREO.

Some of the "nice birds" that we saw in North Carolina in June '04 seem to be getting less common overall.
That's the case with one of our best birds, the RED-COCKADED WOODPECKER. According to Birdlife International, this bird of the pines (LONGLEAF, SHORTLEAF, SLASH, and LOBLOLLY), declined overall during the decade 1980-90 by about 25 per cent. It is now limited to about 30 isolated populations, with the most in South Carolina and Florida. About 50 percent are now in just 6 of those populations.

North Carolina is now the north edge of the RED-COCKADED'S range. We saw the species in an area where it has traditionally nested, in the Croatan Forest. But it was only one pair, that we encountered this year, at an active nest.
RED-COCKADED WOODPECKERS have nested as far north as Maryland in the 1960's (not many, a few were discovered there only in the 1930's). In the 1970's, RED-COCKADED nested in Virginia. Now, no longer, as they are not north of southern North Carolina.

Another bird, enjoyed during our 0'4 NC Tour, with a range that has been receding south, is the WILSON'S PLOVER.
The first specimen of the species was, in 1813, collected by Alexander Wilson, in southern New Jersey (at present-day Cape May). The WILSON'S PLOVER, until not that long ago, nested north of North Carolina, along the beaches of the Delmarva Peninsula and New Jersey. It's occurrence now is as a rarity.

During our tour, a particularly enjoyable venture was an afternoon boat-ride to an offshore barrier island, where no one lives, and where there are no roads. So, no houses and no cars. Only a pristine beach and dunes, by eastern US or Carolina standards, rather unaffected by people. We walked the beach to the sandy area adjacent to one of the inlets where we saw well about 8 WILSON'S PLOVERS.

One thinks, sometimes, about birds that appear to be (or actually are) declining.
The RED-COCKADED WOODPECKER and WILSON'S PLOVER have just been mentioned.
At another spot along the Carolina coast, we saw the RED KNOT, a long-distance migrant in the Americas that's had a depreciable decline in recent years.
WHIP-POOR-WILLS and NIGHTHAWKS seem, on the basis of our previous experience, to be declining.
While RED-HEADED WOODPECKERS were seen when we were in North Carolina at a few places (particularly where we were looking for the RED-COCKADED WOODPECKER), that species has declined (ever disappeared) from many places it has been in the northeastern US.

Conversely, it comes to mind, that from a beach where we were watching SANDWICH and other TERNS feeding in the water, that the BROWN PELICAN is in greater numbers than it has been in the past. A few decades ago, the species was in trouble. No longer so, as its numbers have increased, and it's expanded north - that bird of the mid-Atlantic coast known as Pelecanus occidentalis carolinensis.

A Carolina bird-speciality of the pinewoods, formerly known as the "PINEWOODS SPARROW" seemed to continue in relatively stable numbers. That bird, most often known as the BACHMAN'S SPARROW, is named after a Carolinean (a South Carolinean) of the early 1800's.

The "Carolinean bird" with which we had the most contact during our evening and after-dark excursions was the CHUCK-WILL'S-WIDOW, Caprimulgus carolinensis. But our best encounter in the dark was when, as we were going along a remote dirt road, we heard in a roadside tree, a young owl. We stopped the vehicle, and within moments, there was an adult BARRED OWL, that also came on the scene. It was looking directly at us, with its big brown eyes, just a few feet away, in the shine of our headlights.

But a bird that we enjoyed as much as (if not more than) any other during the tour was one that would come out to sing up in a tree and atop a bush late in the afternoon, the PAINTED BUNTING. It reaches the northern limit of its breeding range along the southern North Carolina coast. What a nice bird, the adult male is to see, with bright blue, green, and red.
It was a target to be seen for all of us, and we loved it!

Reading about the PAINTED BUNTING in the historical book noted earlier, written by Mark Catesby in 1731, we learn that to the south, the Spanish colonists called the bird the "MARIPOSA PINTADA", the "PAINTED BUTTERFLY".
In that book, we also read that back in those days, it was commonly kept as a popular caged bird. A governor of South Carolina at that time kept 4 or 5 of the colorful songsters in cages.
In New Orleans, among the French inhabitants, the bird was also very popular as a cage-bird. During a visit there, Alexander Wilson wrote of it as being the most common of the birds kept in homes. A name given to it was 'NONPAREIL". Of course, the brilliant adult males were favored. It became known that it took over a year for the males to attain their colorful plumage.
During our tour, we saw a few males, some still dull, others bright.
It's nice to know that nowadays, the only way people enjoy the sight and sound of the PAINTED BUNTING is as we did, in the wild. (Native birds in the US can no longer be kept as caged birds.)

Referring to birds in the US, here's a trivia question of sorts:
Other than some very localized, sometimes recently "split" species (such as 2 of the Scrub-Jays, the Gunnison Sage-Grouse, Juniper Titmouse, the re-introduced California Condor, and the Yellow-billed Magpie, actually endemic to California):
What species are endemic to only the Lower 48 States?

There are not many: RED-COCKADED WOODPECKER, FISH CROW, CAROLINA CHICKADEE, BACHMAN'S SPARROW, BOAT-TAILED GRACKLE.

We saw all of these during our North Carolina tour. (This comes to mind as one of our participants was a Canadian, and for him 3 of these species were "lifers" .)

And if you think that one might have been forgotten, the BROWN-HEADED NUTHATCH also resides in the Bahamas.

The best mammal experience we had during our '04 North Carolina tour was when we came upon a group of 8 River Otters, frolicking together in a pond.

There are listings of birds, as well as the other wildlife, that have been found cumulatively during FONT North Carolina Tours, elsewhere in our web-site. 

Birds & Other Wildlife during previous North Carolina Tours

Upcoming North Carolina Tour Itineraries

To Top of Page.

JapaN SPRING BIRDING TOUR (on Honshu & the little island in the Sea of Japan with a big migration, Hegura) 
May 2004

Links:

List of Birds & Other Wildlife during our May '04 Japan Tour

Cumulative List of Birds during our Spring Tours in Japan

Cumulative List of Birds during our Tours in Japan  

Upcoming Japan Tour Itineraries

The following account written by Armas Hill, leader of the tour.

"Japan in the Spring, with Lots of Birds on a Little Island"

This was our 22nd FONT birding tour in Japan. 14 have been in the winter, and the tour just done was our 8th in the spring.

And it was our 3rd tour with a visit to a most intriguing place, the tiny Hegura Island in the Sea of Japan - one of the best places anywhere to experience and enjoy a spring migration of birds.

That island, Hegura, certainly is small. It's less than 1 kilometer wide and less than 2 kilometers long. One can walk the path around the entire coastline of the island in less than an hour.

Some people live on that small island. But not many, about 50. In the morning, the women of Hegura dive for seaweed. Later in the day, if sunny, they put it out to dry. Men go out on boats to fish.

There was a small store on the island. But no longer. When I asked a young Japanese girl who spoke some English, how, for example, she would buy food or other items, she told me she would order such things on the internet, and they would be brought on the ferry, from the small city of Wajima, about two hours away by boat.

There is a school on the island, with an enrollment of 5 students.

Fortunately, something that does exist on the island is a small inn, where visitors, such as us, can sleep Japanese-style on the floor, and where meals, Japanese-style, can be eaten. Assorted seafood, along with locally-grown seaweed, locally-grown vegetables, and noodles and rice are served. But the place is great for 2 or 3 days not just to experience some rural Japanese living, but to have, virtually outside the door, some truly tremendous birding during spring migration.

A bit more can be said about the island, off the west coast of Japan, and east of Korea and south of Manchuria. Birds that pass through Hegura, arriving either at night or by day, include not only those that travel north through Japan, but also some species more common in those other lands of Korea and Manchuria.

The tallest structure on the island is a white lighthouse, located near a small woodlot, where the traveling birds stop to rest. The pines and other short trees and bushes, are for a while the haunts of migrating birds. Others occur in such places as a field of tall grass, a small garden, the playground of the school, or in the debris that may be strewn by the buildings. Birds can be anywhere. Along the path that encircles the island, there are about six shrines by the sea, near the mostly rocky coastline. Birds of various kinds are to be found in that setting, in the rocks or by the pools.

The ferry goes once a day, each direction, between Wajima and Hergura Island, in the morning to the island, late in the afternoon from it. During the ferry-rides, there can be nice seabirding. In the spring, the endemic alcid, known in English as the Japanese Murrelet, and in Japanese as the "Kanmuri-umisuzume", can be seen. "Umisuzume" is a Japanese word meaning "sea sparrow". Another alcid in those waters is the Rhinoceros Auklet. Streaked Shearwaters can be seen in large numbers from the ferry, as can Red-necked Phalaropes. On our way to Hegura this time, there was a Red Phalarope or two among the flocks of Red-necked. On our way from Hegura, we went through an area with swarms of Streaked Shearwaters. There were hundreds of them flying about near the boat.

On the island itself, during our 3-day visit that was part of the Spring '04 FONT Japanese birding tour, about a hundred species were found. In that total, there were landbirds (many), shorebirds and waterbirds. Probably more species, and more individual birds, can be found on Hegura during a good day or two in May than maybe anywhere else in Japan. And with the strong probability of rarities, there's the potential for more birding excitement in the spring on Hegura than at any other Japanese locale.

For that reason, not just the birds but Japanese birders migrate to Hegura in the spring en mass. Again of us, this time on Hegura as during our previous times, we mingled with a number of Japanese birders, even with our differences in language and culture notwithstanding. Our experience in a place so far away from our homes, and so different than where we live, will always be remembered.

Another experience that's fascinating, no matter where it is in the world, is to be in the midst of a major bird migration. It can be done at various particular spots in the world, some of which are well-known such as Point Pelee in Canada in the spring, Cape May in the eastern US and Falsterbo in southern Sweden, both in the fall. But the phenomenon on Hegura Island off Japan in the spring, with the right conditions, is about as good as it gets.

The "bird island" of Hegura can be for a birder a bit like a "fantasy island". It's a place where one can become immersed in birds. It's also a place so very far removed from our everyday lives, without hustle or bustle. Just to relate in perspective how special a place Hegura can be to a Japanese birder, we met some who found it worthwhile to travel for more than a day in each direction, between their homes and Hegura, in order to spend even just a few hours on the island between the ferry-arrival in the morning and the ferry-departure in the afternoon.

Also interesting to think about is how much time the migrating birds spend on the island. Some birds seem to stay more than a day. Others seem to be island-bound just a short time. Some Hobbies and Peregrines that appeared to arrive during an afternoon, to perch in pine trees and on a communications tower, were gone the next morning. During one day, Cuckoos heard calling were mostly Oriental. The following day, the sound of the Common Cuckoos was more predominant.

One thing that's especially good about birding on Hegura is that birds that can elsewhere be notorious skulkers are often more readily seen. In that category, on Hegura in the spring, are birds such as the shy Japanese Robin (mostly in late-April), the Siberian Blue Robin (mostly in early to mid-May), and the White's Ground Thrush (in April & May).

Routine spring-time migrants on Hegura, come from the southeast Asian tropics and continue onward to their northern breeding grounds. Hence, the adjective "Siberian" occurs more than once. Such birds include the Siberian Rubythroat, Siberian Stonechat, and the Siberian Thrush (in addition to the Siberian Blue Robin, already mentioned). Others include the Yellow-breasted Bunting and the Blue-and-white Flycatcher, with males of both bright and colorful.

Already mentioned, in regard to Hegura, has been aspect of birds occurring that are more commonly seen on the Asian mainland than they are otherwise in Japan. Birds in that category during our '04 tour included the Swinhoe's Robin, Mugimaki Flycatcher, Tricolored Flycatcher, Black-naped Oriole, Tristram's Bunting, and Chestnut Bunting. Trevor, in our group, who had migrated from Australia to join us, was lucky to see all of these. Lucky, yes, but the birds were due as much to his persistence, as he walked almost as much as one could in Australia (in order to be "at the right place at the right time").

During one of our days on Hegura in May '04, Mugimaki Flycatchers were actually common. That Japanese name notwithstanding, the species is normally a rarity in Japan.

In one area on the island, in brush by a garden, there were over a half-dozen Chestnut Buntings, with an assortment of buntings of other kinds. None of them were more attractive than the male Chestnut (its coloration chestnut and yellow). To go where the Chestnut Bunting would be seen in its attractive attire on its breeding grounds, one would go to the region of Manchuria and eastern Siberia.

Some mostly bright-yellow Black-naped Orioles were seen during our tour. They also breed in Manchuria, as well as in Korea and China.

To see such birds as the bunting and the oriole and other of Asia on the island less than a kilometer wide certainly involves a lot less travel would be required elsewhere.

Some Old World Flycatchers were particularly abundant for us on Hegura in mid-May '04. In addition to the Blue-and-white (the male when low in a bush is a beauty), and the rare Tricolored and the Mugimaki, there were others in the flycatcher tribe the Asian Brown, the Sooty (or Dark-sided), the Gray-streaked, and the Narcissus, the last of these a particularly attractive Japanese bird. They don't come much more attractive.


Narcissus Flycatcher

Old World Warblers are quite different than those of the New World. While the latter are considerably more colorful, the former can be more challenging to ID. But that's not as hard to do when one flies into a window of the inn where we stayed, and then stunned, it can be held in the hand - as it was in the hand of Ellen from Massachusetts. That Arctic Warbler (the borealis subspecies, with the yellowish vent) did recover. A short while after its colliding with the window, it was well to fly away - it would have a long way yet to go to the northern hinterlands of Siberia. Other migrating warblers included the Hume's (formerly Yellow-browed), the Sikhalin (formerly Pale-legged) and the Eastern Crowned. The latter was the most common, but any of them could be found in any tree or bush.

One of the 3 species of Old World Cuckoos that we saw, the Lesser, was seen sitting on a rock by the sea, as it rested before it would continue on its way.

3 species of Shrikes were seen during our '04 tour on Hegura. The Bull-headed is common throughout much of Japan, but there were also fine looks at the Tiger (or Thick-billed) Shrike, and the Brown. The latter is a much more attractive bird than its name implies.

Among the Thrushes we saw on Hegura, again the name Brown is not quite enough for that bird with a reddish breast that rather resembles an American Robin. Other thrushes during the tour included the Dusky, the Eye-browed, the Pale (another weak name), and the Japanese Grey, in addition to the Siberian and White's Ground Thrush already mentioned. All of these were migrants on the island. The Blue Rock Thrush (with a chestnut belly) is a resident.

A small group of Ashy Minivets arrived on the island, appearing in low trees by the inn, just as we were about to go for the ferry to leave the island. How good it was for such nice birds to come right to us as we had just about run out of time (and as our weary feet were about to make their one last island-walk to the dock).

One last, interesting thing about the birds of Hegura. A number of the birds most common on the main Japanese islands, such as Honshu, are absent, or nearly so, on Hegura. There are no Tree Sparrows or Grey Starlings. Bulbuls and White-eyes are few and far between. There are some crows, but not many. Woodpeckers and tits do not occur. Nor do birds such as the Japanese Wagtail (which is common only a couple hours away) or the Japanese Green Pheasant. All the birds noted in this paragraph are among the most common throughout much of Japan. For example, in virtually every Japanese city, Eurasian Tree Sparrows are abundant. (It's an interesting side-note that there are no House Sparrows anywhere in Japan. Yes, birds are different there on the other side of the world.)

Cumulatively, 127 species of birds have been seen during the 3 FONT tours on Hegura Island. About a hundred species were seen in May '04. A cumulative list of these Birds on Hegura is elsewhere in this web-site. 

There were also birds, of course, seen elsewhere during our May '04 Japan Spring Birding Tour, other than on Hegura.

Among the best were these:

Along the west coast of Japan, in some trees that were budding, birds, mostly Bulbuls were feeding. But among them were some absolutely beautiful waxwings, Bohemian Waxwings, that occur in Japan as wanderers mostly in the winter. Japanese Waxwings also winter in Japan, but our birds were with red and white on the wings and yellow on the tails.

On a small pond in central Honshu, there was another species still present that's more apt to be a Japanese winter visitor. There was a pair of Smews, a red-headed female, and a brilliantly patterned black-and-white male.

Shorebirds (called waders in the Old World) were enjoyed in eastern Honshu, with many, during their northward migration, in fine breeding plumage. Particularly nice, in an area of mudflats, were Bar-tailed Godwits, Mongolian Plovers, and Great Knot.


Mongolian Plover (also called Lesser Sandplover)

In flooded rice-fields, there were many to see including Sharp-tailed Sandpiper, Curlew Sandpiper, Red-necked Stint, Dunlin, Terek Sandpiper, Whimbrel, Pacific Golden Plover, Snipe, Ruddy Turnstone, and Grey-tailed Tattler. Such traveling shorebirds are nice to see anywhere in the world that they happen to be, especially when in their nuptial attire.

In a reedy marshland, we saw two specialties the Japanese Reed Bunting as it sang its song, and the Japanese Marsh Warbler as it did its aerial display. In the Birdlife International publication, "Threatened Birds of the World", both of these rare & localized Japanese breeders have alternate names the Ochre-rumped Bunting and the Marsh Grassbird. To Japanese birders, they're known, respectively, as ""Ko-jurin" and "O-sekka".

Nearby, another avian denizen of the Japanese marshes was making its loud racket, the Oriental Great Reed Warbler, called the "O-yoshikiri" in Japanese. Its noisy calls were incessant, in whatever language.

That should give somewhat of an image of our most-recent spring birding tour in Japan. 

In 2005, from May 14 to 31, when again we'll visit that small island that's a magnet for birds, Hegura. Other islands will be visited as well Amami, Okinawa (where there's an endemic rail that's only been known to science for a couple decades, and an endemic woodpecker that may well be the rarest in the world). And also, on the island of Kyushu, we'll go for the most colorful of Japanese birds, the Fairy Pitta.

Information about this upcoming Japanese birding tour is elsewhere in this web-site. 

List of Birds & Other Wildlife during our Japan Spring Tour in '04

Bird-List from previous Japan tours in the Spring

Cumulative List of Birds during our Tours in Japan  

Upcoming Japan Birding Tour Itineraries

To Top of Page.

Texas & nearby New Mexico
April-May 2004

 

Links:

List of Birds & Other Wildlife 
during our Apr/May '04 tour 
in west Texas & New Mexico

A Complete List of Texas Birds

Our Texas birding tour in Apr/May '05 will be crossing the state, from east to west.   

Upcoming Texas Tour Itineraries

 

The following narrative was written by  Armas Hill, leader of the tour. In it, in addition to birds & animals that were seen in west Texas during our present-day tour (Apr/May '04), there's a reference to life was that was in that region in days long gone by. In that regard, the largest animal now known to have ever flown is referred to - a creature called Quetzalcoatlus. Of course, it's the largest known to have ever flown - it's Texas.  

"Pronghorns & Longhorns, the Colima & a Ringtail"

During our tour in west Texas and nearby New Mexico, April 25 to May 3, 2004, Pronghorns and Longhorns were among the creatures seen.

Actually, there were many more Pronghorns, the graceful and attractive wild antelopes of the American West. They can move at considerable speed.

Not moving much at all, were the fascinating Longhorn Cattle that were seen. We didn't see many, but they were a sight out on the rather barren land by the Chihuahuan Desert.

The Chihuahuan Desert is the largest desert in North America. There had been some rains prior to our visit, and the plants were blooming. Flowers, some yellow, white, red, and other colors, were amopng the agave, prickly pear and other cacti, cholias, ocotillo, lechuguilla, acacia, yucca, and candelilla. Yes, the desert was a nice place to be, and we were there at a good time.

Our tour in Texas was in the area known as the "Trans-Pecos" - that is generally the 10% or so of the huge state west of the Pecos River.
Pecos
, by the way, is one of the west Texan towns through which we traveled. It was, at one time, a rough frontier town. Today, times there seem a bit rough.
To give an idea of what it's like around Pecos, let's note that north of there, along the main highway, is a town with a population of 20, that is the only town in the least populated county in the Lower 48 States. (The county population fluctuates, but it's about 110. There are more Turkey Vultures
in the county than there are people.)

We traveled in this region of desert, former frontier towns, pronghorns and longhorns, actually to see birds, and other wildlife. And that we did, with 145 species of birds, along with a nice assortment of animals.

In western Texas, 3 particular regions that we visited to see birds and other nature were the Guadalupe Mountains (the highest in Texas), the more-rolling Davis Mountains, and the various habitats of Big Bend National Park including the Chisos Mountains.

In nearby New Mexico, we visited an array of habitats in a relatively small area (by "Western standards") near Carlsbad Caverns, where the caves are known for their bats. A target-bird of that region is the Cave Swallow, which was actually nesting outside the door of one of our overnight accommodations. As we slept inside, the swallows were doing so outside.

Other birds that we saw in that region of New Mexico included:
Scissor-tailed Flycatcher,
in an agricultural area (about as far west as the species regularly occurs),
Varied Buntings
, a pair of them that appeared to be nesting in the mountains,
a Golden Eagle, circling overhead above a mountain butte,

Common Poorwills
, at dusk, sitting on dirt roads, and adding to the sounds at dusk,
Lesser Nighthawks
, many of them together, after dark, catching insects by lights along a road.

By day, Black-chinned Hummingbirds were seen on their nests,

Canyon Wrens
were both seen and heard, with their songs echoing from cliff-sides,
and Cactus Wrens were ubiquitous.

Phainopepla
and Pyrrhuloxia were seen (easier to see than to say).

At one place with green trees and a springs, surrounded by habitats with brown, we saw red - lots of red, with numerous Cardinals, Summer Tanagers, House Finches, and Vermilion Flycatchers (for a red bird, the adult male is about as good as it gets).

We also, in New Mexico, saw our share of yellow in the Yellow-breasted Chat, Yellow Warbler, Yellow-headed Blackbird, and Scott's Oriole. Our glimpse at the yellow of a MacGillivray's Warbler was a bit quicker.

Not just Inca Doves, but now Eurasian Collared-Dove is in the Carlsbad area.

For a tour mostly in Texas, as just noted, our New Mexico birding was not at all bad.

But there were a number of birds that, of course, we saw in Texas, that were only seen in Texas:

One of the primary avian-targets of a west Texas tour is the Colima Warbler. The species only occurs in the United States in the Chisos Mountains in Big Bend National Park in Texas. Otherwise it is Mexican.
We had a wonderful encounter with this targeted-bird.
After walking a couple hours up a mountain trail, being "trailed" ourselves by tame and seemingly-hungry Mexican Jays (how could they be that hungry?), we were in a beautiful area with a comfortable temperature. It was there where we enjoyed the sight and sound of the Colima, not far in front of us, singing as it sat on a bare branch atop an oak tree.

As we were watching the warbler, we saw that we in turn were being watched. Also in front of us, in some large rocks beneath the oaks, there was first a head, and then an entire animal. It was close, and it was curious. It was a Ringtail, an animal somewhat similar to a Raccoon, but slimmer, with a long, bushy, striped tail. According to "the book", the Ringtail is "strictly nocturnal". That Ringtail did not read the book.

Those of us who went further up the mountain trail, encountered a singing Painted Redstart, another warbler most-often in Mexico.

Another bird more apt to be in Mexico than the US, and another prime avian-target of our tour was the Lucifer Hummingbird. It's another specialty of the Big Bend area, where we saw in the nicely an area of desert with flowering plants. Undoubtedly attracted to those agave stalks, male Lucifer Hummingbirds sat in good view for us to see (in a scope). The small hummingbird with a long bill, long tail, and a wonderful purple gorget, was quite a sight. Nice to see, as well, was a male doing its aerial display flight.

Some other birds in that area, also seen, but so much in the open were the Crissal Thrasher and Gray Vireo. A pair of Verdins were nicely seen at their nest.

Notable among the raptors that we saw in the Trans-Pecos region of west Texas, were Common Black-Hawk in the Davis Mountains, and Harris's Hawk in the Rio Grande Valley.

Particularly enjoyed in the Chihuahuan Desert (either in the Rio Grande Valley and/or elsewhere) were some birds that stayed close to the ground Roadrunners (we have some great looks) and both Gambel's and Scaled Quail.

In the open country of the Davis Mountains, there were Bluebirds. Mostly Western Bluebirds, but also Mountain Bluebird (a lingerer from the winter).

In the town of Fort Davis, feeders at a small lot attracted birds. At the hummingbird feeders, there were Black-chinned Hummers, both males and females. At the feeders with seeds, there were a number of Goldfinches, both Lesser and American.

In small trees and bushes of the Guadalupe Mountains, birds included Red-naped Sapsucker (apparently another lingerer from the winter), and Western Tanager and Townsend's Solitaire (these apparently resting during their migration).

Also migrating were some birds we saw in areas of open water near Pecos. Notable among them, and quite attractive, were many Wilson's Phalaropes. Also attractive, in their breeding attire, were American Avocets.
Nice to see, and somewhat unexpected, were Least Terns.

Thus, this has been a summary of some of the birds we saw in West Texas and New Mexico, during our Spring '04 tour.

However, it was not only birds, and some animals, and flowers, that we saw during the tour. It was also an area with some very spectacular scenery of the Southwestern US.

In that area, one could stand and look, and with an imagination, and having read a bit about what was there historically, the mind could revert to other days there a long time ago. That's the way I'll now end this narrative

Today, it's birds that fly in the skies of west Texas. And bats and insects also. However, in days now long gone, as many as millions of years ago, in those skies of Big Bend and nearby, there were other creatures that flew.

If we'd been able to have observed them, to us they would have been astounding. They were Pterosaurs, or flying reptiles, in the Age of Dinosaurs. 
Birds, it's commonly accepted, are said to have evolved from reptiles in that age. 


The largest animal now known to have ever flown under its own power did so in the skies of what's now west Texas. It's wing-span was nearly 40 feet. The name given to that amazing creature, that once was, is Quetzalcoatlus northropi. It's named after a feathered serpent Aztec god. (Today, further south in the Americas, from Mexico to Panama, there's a living bird also named after that god. That bird, the Resplendent Quetzal,
has been called the most beautiful bird in the world.)

But referring again to Quetzalcoatlus That incredible creature has only become known to science rather recently. The first specimen of it was found in the early 1970s. It was part of a wing. Since that initial specimen was found, a number of smaller individuals have also been discovered, about 25 miles from where the first specimen was obtained. These specimens in combination give a fairly good idea of what Quetzalcoatlus was like. All of the specimens are from the end of the Cretaceous Period (of the Mesozoic Era), about 66 million years ago.

Pterosaurs
, such as Quetzalcoatus, died out near the time of the extinction of the dinosaurs. Thus it was that those flying dinosaurs, like Quetzalcoatus, and smaller ones (as small as sparrows), actually overlapped with birds for about half the time they existed.

Such are fascinating thoughts that one can have, about creatures that once were, in western Texas skies, as we look for and observe birds in that area today. Yes, fascinating it is. It can make our imaginations run wild regarding the flying dinosaurs, once there, as small as sparrows, and as large as Quetzalcoatus northropi, a giant with a 40-foot wing-span, that's now known as the largest creature that's ever flown.

List of Birds & Other Wildlife during our Apr/May '04 tour in west Texas & New Mexico

A Complete List of Texas Birds

Our Texas birding tour in Apr/May '05 will be crossing the state, from east to west.   

Upcoming Texas Tour Itineraries

To Top of Page.

Colorado, nearby Kansas & Wyoming
April 2004

Links:

Birds & Other Wildlife during our Colorado tour in '04

Birds & Other Wildlife during previous tours in Colorado & nearby states

Birds & Other Wildlife during previous Colorado Tours in April

A Feature - the Grouse of Colorado & Kansas

Upcoming Colorado Tour Itineraries

The following account written by Armas Hill, leader of the tour.

"Grouse, Grosbeaks, and a Worm-eating Warbler"

One of the most enjoyable of American bird-related experiences is to watch the various species of grouse in the West performing at their leks in the spring. Males display there annually as they court females.

During our April 16-25, 2004 FONT tour, mostly in Colorado, we had the good fortune to observe nicely 6 Grouse species, each doing their distinctive displays in habitats as varied as in sage country surrounded by snow-capped mountains (the Greater-Sage), in picturesque rolling open hills (the Sharp-tailed and the Blue), and in grassy prairies (the 2 Prairie Chickens). All of the species sought were seen very well (the 5 just mentioned, and the rather recently-split Gunnison's Sage Grouse).

Geographically, this tour in the American West, in addition to being in Colorado, included some adjacent states. It was in Kansas where we observed an early-morning performance of the endangered Lesser Prairie-Chicken, and where, not far away, we also enjoyed a close-up and unexpected view of another threatened species, the Mountain Plover. We had stopped along a little-used road to look, to the left, at Burrowing Owls that were among a Prairie Dog colony. To the right, on the ground just a few feet away, but blending in, was the plover.


Mountain Plover

We also visited, for short periods, the states of Oklahoma and Nebraska. In Oklahoma, we did not spend much time. Nor did we see any extraordinary birds, although Loggerhead Shrike and Vesper Sparrow are always nice to see. In Nebraska, near the northeastern Colorado border, there is a place, however, that must be mentioned. It's the small town of Haigler, a place that's seen, well, better days (maybe)! Last year, along the main road near Haigler, there was a speed-trap. That's all I'll say, but this year I wanted to take a moment in the town to see where the money went. Well, we spend more than a moment. Not that there was a restaurant, stores, or anything to keep us. There wasn't. But the town would be a mecca for a photographer, let's say, with a theme of "what's become of buildings that were something back when..." .
Actually, however, there are some people living in the town. Generally modest homes are along the few streets. But never in one place would one find such a hodgepodge of stuff as in Haigler. On the lawns and along the streets, there were things and more things, decorations of all sorts and colors, statues and woodcarvings, and the like. Another name for the town, that we thought appropriate, would be "Tacky, Nebracky". Among all of the things, there were bird-feeders - a plethora of bird-feeders. We surmised that with so many there would have to be an interesting bird or two. However, each and every one of the feeders contained what would be called "bird junk food" - you know, that "wrong kind of seed". And so it was that the little town was absolutely filled with House Sparrows, Starlings, Grackles, and Red-winged Blackbirds. There were House Finches, and Goldfinches (actually these were rather refreshing to see, as were some Chipping Sparrows). As Eurasian Collared-Doves have spread north, they found Haigler, and stayed there in numbers, flourishing. Also in numbers overhead, were floating Turkey Vultures, which apparently roost along the outskirts of the little town.
Not only were there seed-feeders in Haigler, but also some hummingbird feeders. I asked a man with a filled hummingbird feeder on his property if he knew what kind of hummingbird would be there. He told me he had never seen one there, but the feeder, he indicated, was ready if one were to come.

Also outside Colorado, we spent more time in Wyoming, where among some of the best birds of the tour that were not grouse, were those that were at a fine set of feeders in the high-country during a snow-fall. They included both Pine and Evening Grosbeaks, Red Crossbill, and Cassin's Finch, in addition to 3 types of juncos.

In all, 160 types of birds were observed during our week-long tour. 14 species were found outside of Colorado only; the rest were in the state.

As noted, there were birds enjoyed other than grouse. But it was the birds in that group that were the highlights. The tour was structured so that early on given mornings, we would be at the appropriate locales for particular species.


Blue Grouse

During one morning, we were able to observe 2 grouse species at virtually the same time, when there was a group of Sharp-tailed Grouse like "wind-up dolls" strutting on a bare hillside, as nearby male Blue Grouse were seen booming. Another Blue Grouse, in that area, as it walked along a dirt road, came to within feet of us. As we were watching those grouse that morning, we were hearing the calls of Sandhill Cranes that were nesting in the area.

Probably our best encounter with grouse during the tour, and the one that most of us enjoyed the most, was that with the Greater Sage-Grouse. At the end of what had already been a fine day, and after a quick dinner, we went to a particular road out in the countryside, where, from our experience during previous tours, we expected the grouse to be. And that they were! That evening, there were about 50 of them, either on the road, or close by the road. As evening turned to night, the grouse stayed. Some were directly in front of our vehicle, in the shine of the headlights, as we watched them display right in front of us. Others were so close, outside the open door of our van, that at times we thought one or two would come inside with us!

The displaying of the Sage Grouse brought to mind the traditional dances of the Native American Indians who also lived in that open sage country of the West. The male grouse spread their tails to become like spiked fans. They draw back their heads. And, as the birds did in the shine of our headlights, they inflate their chests, giving an appearance of two large eggs "over easy". As they do this, they make double-hooting and pumping sounds. Watching this is one of the most spectacular experiences an observer can have with any North American bird.

A similar bird, restricted to a range that's mostly in Colorado, and actually nearly endemic to the state, is one that was until recently considered a subspecies of the "Sage Grouse". Now, a distinct species, it's called the Gunnison Sage-Grouse, and during our '04 tour, we had our best experience with it yet. Further away from us than the Greater Sage-Grouse, but still nice in a telescope, was the display that we witnessed early in the morning, as the day brightened. Coyotes passed by the lekking site, but the birds stayed and their show was a good one. (Last year, when coyotes came, just before sunrise, the grouse flew off.)

The 2 species of Prairie-Chickens during our tour this year deserve further mention. They, like the other grouse, are great to watch doing their early-morning displays. During our '04 tour, we saw about a dozen Lesser Prairie Chickens performing at daybreak at one of their favored places to do so in the grasslands. A great show! Included were some birds that had the habit of jumping up from the ground to be atop low bushes. The 30 or so Greater Prairie Chickens that we saw this year did their displaying on a mowed portion of an alfalfa field.


Greater Prairie Chickens

Some background information regarding each of the species of grouse that we saw during our tour in Colorado and adjacent Kansas can be found elsewhere in this website. A Feature about the Grouse.

Now, referring to some birds other than grouse that we saw and enjoyed during our tour:

In the high country of northwestern Colorado and nearby Wyoming, Mountain Bluebirds were much in evidence that they were migrating north. Against a background of snow, the blue of dozens of males was quite nice.

Also, that day in the "quite nice category", was a Golden Eagle very close to us along the side of the road. As snow was lightly falling, the eagle stayed, perched on a post. Carrion, a deer that had been hit, was nearby on the ground.

Further up the road, at a farm, on a trailer behind a parked tractor, there was hay. In it, apparently, there was something that Yellow-headed Blackbirds found favorable, as there were at least a couple dozen of them feeding on the top of the hay.

Later that day, at a bird-feeder of a more conventional sort, at a nature center, among the birds there were a few Brown-capped Rosy-Finches. That species, of course, is a Colorado target. Two other Rosy-finch species that can occur there in the winter, were simply not there in '04, the Black and Gray-crowned.

Raptors of northwestern Colorado that was particularly nice to see were the "gray ghosts in flight", male Northern Harriers, and Rough-legged Hawks not yet departed for further north. 

On the native grasslands of northeast Colorado, two species that were great to see were the McCown's and Chestnut-collared Longspurs. They were also great to hear, as they sang and did their displays.

In southwestern Colorado, in an appropriate habitat, the Juniper Titmouse was a good find. As was, nearby, a Lucy's Warbler.

In southeastern Colorado, again in an appropriate habitat for a particular bird, we saw that bird well. It was the Snowy Plover. There were a few on an alkaline lake flat. Nearby, along the shoreline where there was more water, there were both Marbled Godwit and Long-billed Curlew, with bills upturned and downturned respectively.
Nearby, At another lake, with more water, there was a nice number of Bonaparte's Gulls in breeding plumage. 

Along a fast-flowing stream in a central Colorado canyon, we watched a Dipper, out of and in the water. Thanks, Sally, for leading us to it.

In the mountains of central Colorado, we particularly enjoyed our encounters with some corvids that liked to be fed peanuts Clark's Nutcrackers, Gray Jays, and Steller's Jays were all fond of the treats that we put out for them from the van. They came in closely.

Earlier in the tour, during the day when we traveled the entire width of Kansas from south to north, we had an interesting time in regard to weather. Nearly that entire day was in open, flat farm country. In the past, for us, a good day for numbers of Swainson's Hawks, Ferruginous Hawk, and other birds of the plains. This day, however, what we were to remember the most was the wind. There a noticeable breeze in the morning, but it was not hampering. At one spot, we got out of the van to get a better angle to see a young Great Horned Owl sitting in a nest of sticks in a lone tree, the only tree for miles. When we walked, we flushed a female Bobwhite from its nest on the ground. To do that (and we did not know we would), the bird must nearly be stepped on. Then, after an abrupt flight, it sits ever so still on the ground, blending in.

Later, within an hour, it became virtually impossible in the strong wind, to even step out of the van, let alone flush a Bobwhite or see an owl. Bunch after bunch of Tumbleweed rolled across the flat land, from west to east. Dust rose from the dirt on the ground, and actually at places became blinding as we drove north. We stopped during mid-afternoon in the small community by I-70 called Goodland, Kansas to get some gas. The wind there was so very strong that I had to literally hold on to something (anything) as I pumped the gas. Against the wind, the door of the convenience store was truly a challenge to open.

That evening, after we settled in for the night in Wray, Colorado, we saw the TV report regarding the strong winds that buffeted the open Colorado-Kansas countryside earlier that day. It was indicated that the strongest of the winds were recorded, during mid-afternoon, in that place called Goodland, Kansas. Sustained winds were 60 miles per hour. Gusts were higher. I-70, the main east-west highway, was closed that afternoon due to the blinding dust. Along that highway, during such conditions, nearly 30 vehicles were involved in a crash.

The next morning (windless, by the way), after we had seen Greater Prairie-Chickens performing at daybreak, and after breakfast, we opted to go to a farm east of Wray, where there's a small grove of trees that during each of our previous tours had produced birds. Particularly, in the brush there, I remembered seeing, during other years, Harris' Sparrows.

This year there, again, Harris' Sparrows were there. Two of them were seen nicely. And lots of other birds were there too, in the brush and in the trees. But apparent this time were birds of the East. Not just Eastern Phoebe, and Eastern Bluebird, but also much in evidence were Cardinals singing, Red-bellied Woodpeckers calling, Blue Jays scolding, and Brown Thrasher not making a sound at all. With these birds it was a bit like being somewhere in the East such as Delaware. We had to remember that we were in the West in Colorado. In addition to seeing the eastern birds just noted, there was more that morning. Totally unexpected were 2 birds out of range, both of them warblers from southeast North America. Both were found up in the trees by Richard from New York. His good eyes got us on the first surprise, a Worm-eating Warbler, and then there was a Northern Parula! The range maps for both of these show that their normal haunts are many miles away from that one grove of trees.

Also interesting in the warbler-department at that spot was that both the more-easterly Myrtle and the westerly Audubon's were present. We saw breeding-plumaged males there of both of these forms of the Yellow-rumped Warbler.

But going back for a moment to the Worm-eating Warbler that we saw in Colorado, I don't know how many records there would be for that species in the state, but there can not be many. That little bird that's less than 6 inches long, must have had, the previous day, the ride of its life in the 60 mph winds! One has to assume that rode the winds from somewhere that it would more normally be such as the Gulf Coast of far-eastern Texas. The species migrates to there in the spring from Central America.

Here, now, are the "Top Birds" of the FONT April 2004 Tour in Colorado & adjacent states, as voted by the participants following the tour:

1 - GREATER SAGE-GROUSE
2 - Lesser Prairie Chicken
3 - Greater Prairie Chicken
4 - Blue Grouse
5 - Mountain Plover
6 - Brown-capped Rosy-Finch
7 - Rough-legged Hawk
8 - Sharp-tailed Grouse
9 - Pine Grosbeak
10 - Raven (observed near us, snow off its feet)
11 - Bald Eagle (at a nest)
12 - Worm-eating Warbler
13 - Evening Grosbeak
14 - Juniper Titmouse
15 - Gunnison Sage-Grouse
16 - Snowy Plover
17 - Red-bellied Woodpecker (voted for by westerners)
18 - McCown's Longspur
19 - Harris's Sparrow
20 - Golden Eagle
21 - Long-billed Curlew
22 - Clark's Nutcracker
23 - Mountain Bluebird
24 - Yellow-headed Blackbird

A complete list of the birds that have been found during FONT tours in Colorado and nearby states is elsewhere in this website.

Wildlife other than birds were seen during our April '04 tour in Colorado and nearby states. Particularly notable was that we saw as many as 10 individual Moose during our 2 days in northwest Colorado. We also saw and heard Elk. (Not to confuse the issue, but the Moose in Europe is called the Elk. And the animal, there, that we call the Elk is called the Red Deer. Another name for the Elk in North America is the Wapiti.)

Mule Deer were commonly seen during our tour, as were Pronghorn. In the Rocky Mountains, we enjoyed seeing Bighorn Sheep. Other mammals included Yellow-bellied Marmot, 2 species of Jackrabbits, Coyote and Red Fox, Black-tailed Prairie Dog, and numerous Wyoming Ground Squirrels.

Smaller yet, but particularly enjoyed, was the Plains Pocket Mouse that we saw in Kansas, during the darkness before dawn as we were on our way to the lek of the Lesser Prairie Chicken. Particularly enjoyed as when we stopped the van on the road, and one after another ran back and forth in front of us. The little light mice with long tails were not only getting our attention, but also that of a Burrowing Owl by the side of the road.

Another aspect of nature during the tour that should be mentioned, in conclusion, is the absolutely spectacular scenery. Near the end of the tour, and near the end of a day, for example, when we were traveling east toward the Gunnison, as the sun was behind us and the snow-covered mountains of the Rockies in front us, we just had to stop and admire the beauty. It's some of the best that nature has to offer in North America, and anywhere in the world.

We'll be going to this great area of the American West again, in the quest of grouse, other birds, and other nature, in the Spring of 2005. The dates will be April 16-25.

Birds & Other Wildlife during our Colorado tour in '04

Birds & Other Wildlife during previous tours in Colorado & nearby states

Birds & Other Wildlife during previous Colorado Tours in April

A Feature - the Grouse of Colorado & Kansas

Upcoming Colorado Tour Itineraries

To Top of Page.

Panama
March 2004

Links:

List of Birds during our Panama Tour - March '04

Cumulative Bird-List during FONT Tours in Panama

Upcoming Panama Tour Itineraries

The following account written by Armas Hill, leader of the tour.

"Panamanian Birds: Some Greater, Some Lesser, One Resplendent"

Panama may well be considered a "lesser" country in terms of size, but certainly it's a "greater" one in relation to birds. In it, over 900 species have been recorded. A few of them have been so labeled (in their English names) as "lesser" or "greater". Comments about some of these birds, as well as others, will follow in this narrative about our March 22-30, 2004 FONT birding tour in Panama.

But, first, a few words about the small and birdy Central American country, Panama, that's well known for the famous canal that connects the Caribbean and the Pacific. The country, on an isthmus, is actually a connection itself, a "land bridge", between the continents of North and South America. (In this regard, Central America is considered as a portion of the North American continent.)

A long time ago, where eastern Panama is today, there was a sea, and the continents were not joined. Today, in eastern Panama, by the border with Colombia (of which Panama used to be a part), the avifauna is notably South American, with macaws, hummingbirds, antbirds, furnariids, tapaculos, and tanagers representative of that continent.

One species, that's common throughout South America, and reaches its northern limit in the Americas in Panama, is the Southern Lapwing. Vagrants have recently been noted further north in northern Costa Rica and even Belize, but the Panama canal basin is the norm. During our March '04 tour, we s