Showing posts with label Brown Creeper. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Brown Creeper. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 20, 2019

In The Gila: Back To The High Country

I am really behind in this blog.  Writing a post the way I really like to write a post is time consuming.  As of late, I haven't had a lot of time.  Bear with me ;)

A lot of my summer was dedicated to exploring the avifauna in Gila County's high elevation canyons and forests.  Time has gone by since the summer and the Gila County birding has been spectacular, and this post will recap more of my summer.  Tracing back to archives, I did write a post for In The Gila called High Country.  While that was the first half of my summertime explorations, this will be the second half conclusion to that write up.  Come along with me and turn the good ol' mind's eye on, because these high elevation treks in Gila County are worth stepping into.  I'll try my best to describe the locations well and perhaps I'll sell it to the point you readers will go to some of these spots next summer yourself.


The setting of a computer at a table inside an apartment living room is a shelter for me and thousands of others during a Phoenix summer.  Call it a cage too-it's not fun to go outside in the heat.  My computer would be lightened up daily by maps of one remote area to another in those higher elevations of Gila County.  Satellite imagery can be as heroic as Hercules, and it highlighted the places worth investigating while stabbing other locations that weren't time worthy.

One road that I really love is Colcord Road in the northern tip of Gila County.  It is just below the Mogollon Rim and it has it's sections of habitats that are both fun and productive for my bird surveys.  By looking at maps I realized how long Colcord Road (also known as Forest Road 291) is.  The eastern half of the road looked awesome, and I figured that it would give the western half a run for it's money.  When I explored the eastern side of things, I think I liked it a little bitter than it's counterpart.  While the west side has had American Three-toed Woodpeckers, the east side has thick and dense forests filled with Douglas fir, pine, and oak.  One particular drainage system I explored in the afternoon of a day surely has loads of Red-faced Warblers as well as Saw-whet, Flammulated, and Spotted Owls by night.  One fun bird that I encountered though in the owl department in this area was the small but a yet soon-to-be-ferocious immature Northern Pygmy-Owl.  Two of these owls gave themselves away by their insect-like trilling calls.



Songbirds can be challenging to photograph in the forests.  My times on Colcord Road had overcast and cloudy conditions as well as scattered thunderstorms with the monsoon season in session.  Pishing can bring birds in close at times.  This Hutton's Vireo was an awesome exception!



This Brown Creeper cooperated well too.  He was in a drainage where I found myself looking for Spotted Owls.


My worst encounter of the summer was this odd guy on one of Colcord's side roads.  He was one of those who thought he knew everything about my life based on a few things I said and he basically proclaimed to me, "I am all knowing and what I have to say is more important than what you have to say".  All I could detect was constipation because he was full of crap.  When he said, "There was a reason you ran into me today, it's for me to point you to the direction you need to go", I started to walk away and quickly cut off the conversation.  Luckily I had a giant herd of elk to point him to down the road.


An area I really enjoyed fell on the northern flank of the Sierra Ancha Mountains.  On the west side of Road 288, I took a rather rough road called Forest Road 609 for about six miles.  Along the way I encountered lots of pine and oak woodland as well as chaparral habitat.  This area was really awesome.  From Road 609, I hiked deep into the area along FR 486.  Pine and oak habitat filled this area, and landmarks that I explored included Salt Log Canyon, East Lacy Fork, and Indian Camp Reservoir.  Common birds typical of pine and oak woodlands were encountered for the most part, and the highlight bird was a single Downy Woodpecker.  This area is one I wish to return to.  There's a lot of wilderness, as well as some historic cabin that is nearby to where I explored.





After exploring the remote area of Forest Road 609, I continued north on 288 to camp.  I settled down just south of the town of Young, and when I woke up in the morning, I scouted out areas by driving slowly north up Road 288 through Young and north.  The town of Young is small, but it hosts a lot of grassland habitat.  Sadly, most of the habitat is on private property and any birding has to be done from the road.  As I entered Young there was a pond along the road that I decided to check out.  It was private of course, and I stood and scanned things from the road.  Things got fun when I heard and eventually saw a Yellow-billed Cuckoo in the habitats around the pond.  It was pretty cooperative for photographs.



A family of Wild Turkey slowly moved along the meadows and open clearings of Lower Canyon Creek.  The area of Canyon Creek is a fun one, and other locations to visit there are Upper Canyon Creek Fish Hatchery, Airplane Flats Campground, Valentine Ridge Campground, and Colcord Ridge Campground.  In a half day I managed to cover all of those locations.  However, my favorite spot in this area is Forest Road 188 south of Valentine Ridge Campground.  It has an assortment of birds, including Red-faced Warbler and Greater Pewee, and without doubt fun owling chances at night in spring and summer.







The Northern Goshawk is a bird that is without doubt in the Gila County high country.  I hoped for it all summer long without any luck.  My recent post about the Goshawk nest wasn't in Gila County.  Goshawks are elusive "gray ghosts" of high elevation forests and canyons, and it was the last regularly occurring Gila bird I would need for high country.  I also hoped to stumble across some sort of a miraculous Mexican vagrant during these journeys.  Hey hey, Eared Quetzal has shown up in Gila County several times now, and an Elegant Trogon has shown up once.  Despite not finding anything quite elusive as a Goshawk or something nearly as rare as an Eared Quetzal, hiking through miles and miles of terrain I had never been to before was incredibly fun.  There were plenty of Hepatic Tanagers to go along with it.  This bird was in the Whispering Pines area near a location called Bray Creek.


The Whispering Pines and Washington Park area became one of my favorite areas to explore in the summer in Gila.  There is a lot of forest to cover there with many jeep and ATV side roads to explore.  There are drainages with thickly wooded terrain.  There are beautiful creeks full of running water.  There are also plenty of birds.  One morning I had rare company and Caleb Strand joined me.  In the Whispering Pines area we hiked up a drainage called Dude Creek.  The name of the creek was fitting for two guys exploring, and we tallied close to 60 species of birds.  A tally of seven Greater Pewee was incredible along Dude.  There were also some mini waterfalls, Elk, and a cooperative Band-tailed Pigeon.  The creek also held good Spotted Owl habitat.





The wilderness takes people to greatness.  If it weren't for wilderness, I'd be lost in life.  While this post has been a basic summary of my summer adventure, there was a lot more to it.  I contributed a few hundred checklists to eBird from the many hikes I did.  Some days I hiked from anywhere in between 15 and 20 miles.  The more I went, the more I craved to keep going.

Colcord Road is not only awesome in itself, but it is also the access point for several different roads that go further south into the Tonto National Forest.  Once such road is Forest Road 200, that is also known as Chamberlain Road.  One day I took Colcord Road to the east to access FR 200, and I took 200 south to an area that looked awesome on Google Maps.  This spot is called Haigler Creek, and I hiked down a side road labeled as FR 848 to the east from FR 200.  FR 848 was rough for my truck to trust, and I didn't mind a hike down into a canyon that the road led down into.  This canyon harbors Haigler Creek, and from the start I could tell it was scenic.  The creek was nestled down in between two steep slopes for it's duration, and the slopes held stands of thick Douglas fir and ponderosa pine.  I was impressed, and FR 848 continued to go further and eventually parallel both sides of Haigler Creek.  Crossing the creek was a must to explore the area, and it quickly became my favorite location that I birded all summer long due to it's scenic beauty, it's wonder and remoteness, and it's potential for the mountain forest birds that I love.  At this point it was in early August, and a lot of birds were quiet and weren't singing.  The canyon was creepy at times due to it's remoteness too.  There were many twists and turns, and who knows how many Mountain Lions live up on the steep ridges.  A noise above me turned out to be a memorable family of White-nosed Coati-an adult and four young troopers!



The Haigler Creek hike still has me.  I can't wait for next spring and summer when I can go back and fully detect breeding birds such as Red-faced Warbler, Painted Redstart, Spotted Owl, and Flammulated Owl in full numbers.





The best part of the Haigler Creek hike was this epic waterfall where the creek reached it's limit of running water.  Another creek flowed into Haigler Creek from a spot called Colcord Canyon (another spot to explore next summer).  The water flowed into Haigler in the form of this waterfall that was simple but yet astoundingly beautiful.  It was the best scene of my summer in birding in this high country, here is a video:


Once again, I really look forward to going back to Haigler Creek!  Other than my summer adventures, I enjoyed hearing and vicariously seeing adventures of others too.  My sister Talia was a perfect example, and she went on an awesome adventure herself.  She and her husband Tom journeyed across the United States and she got to see lots of amazing states, cities, and wilderness areas.  One place that she went for a few days was Yellowstone National Park.  She was hoping to see a lot of wildlife, especially bears.  Quite surprisingly, she didn't see any bears.  But she did cross paths with a Wolf!

Towards mid-August, I combined my forest birding with some lower elevation riparian birding.  The East Verde River north of Payson was a fun location to bird.  It holds potential for a variety of breeding, migratory, and wintering birdlife.  What got me stoked was a new Gila County lifebird in a Gray Catbird!  It popped out along the trail, gave it's namesake call several times, and sat up for a few pictures.  It was my 314th bird for Gila County.  




In The Gila has a few more posts that I plan to write soon with some exciting birds to be involved-I have to get this blog all caught up!

Saturday, July 19, 2014

Birding Gila County's Pinal Mountains

Today, I birded in the Pinal Mountains in Gila County with my buddy Gordon Karre.  The Pinal Mountains are a wonderful place, and they have great high elevation forest birding.  Prior to today, I had only been to this central Arizona mountain range one other time in 2011.  It has great birding, and I was dying to get out today.  With four more days until my family vacation and a string of twelve hour work shifts remaining before that vacation day, I wanted to bird all day today in higher elevations.  And the Pinal Mountains were a good choice.  Birding with Gordon is awesome, and we combined forces to do some hardcore birding.  By the end of the long day, we tallied nearly 70 species throughout the low and high elevations of the Pinal Mountains.

Despite the fact that we did have a decent species list (with nearly half of those coming from the lower elevations of the Pinals), the birds were rather hard to photograph on this trip.  It is that time of year where parents are feeding young and are on eggs, and most bird species aren't so vocal, yet photograph-able.  We heard many birds and saw most of the species, but many of them were quick glimpses of birds that just weren't cooperative.  With the thick mixed-conifer, aspen, oak, and sycamore forests of the Pinal Mountains, birds have to be searched for carefully!

Before we reached the conifers, Gordon spied this rather weird looking Red-tailed Hawk on a rather weird looking perch, an ocotillo.


As Gordon and I climbed up into the high elevations, the Red-breasted Nuthatches were sure to sound off their trumpets.  I'm not even kidding-if you listen to this small bird, it really sounds like a small trumpet.



One of the day's exciting finds were observing several flocks of Red Crossbills in the area.  This is a bird Gordon and I don't see very often, so it was quite the treat.  The songs and calls of these odd birds were heard throughout the day in various coniferous locations throughout the area.  I wonder what TYPE of Red Crossbill this is?




We also saw plenty of the not-so-creepy Creeper, the Brown Creeper.  It's life is filled with climbing up trees, eating bugs, and then repeating the process after he climbs up to the top of tree by flying down to the bottom of the next tree.  Fun life huh?


This female Broad-tailed Hummingbird just finished eating up an insect, you can see the bug's remains drooping down from the bill.  Gordon nearly captured the bug on film too.  Broad-tailed Hummingbirds are abundant in the Pinal Mountains.


The Pinal Mountains are also home to a good number of Dusky-capped Flycatchers in the pine, oak, and sycamore forests near the Sulfide Del Rey Picnic Area.  These mountains are home to a significant number of southeastern Arizona birds for a central Arizona location.  A Sulphur-bellied Flycatcher was even found here last year and a Short-tailed Hawk was also found here.  But those both pale in comparison to the most likely but hypothetical observation that one once had historically of an ABA mega-rare Orange-billed Nightingale Thrush at the top of these mountains near Pinal Peak.  These Dusky-capped Flycatchers and others show the potential that this underbirded mountain range has.


We observed this Hairy Woodpecker feeding nestlings, which was pretty cool!



Near the top of the Pinals by Pinal Peak we visited a friendly cabin owner's yard to observe his hummingbird feeders.  Did I mention Pinal Peak is nearly eight thousand feet in elevation?  In this upper area, the forest is made up of pine, fir, and aspen and is very cool and has beautiful weather.  The hummingbird feeders are filled with hummers.  This included dozens of Broad-tailed Hummingbirds, two Rufous Hummingbirds, and a pair of Magnificent Hummingbirds.  The Magnificent Hummingbird is a favorite of mine, it was cool to see them in Central Arizona for the first time.

Male Broad-tailed Hummingbirds



Female Magnificent Hummingbird



Although the warblers weren't very viewable today, I was able to get off this picture of the awesome Red-faced Warbler!  It doesn't do the bird justice but it is always cool to see!


And then there was this one bird that Gordon and I spent a lot of time trying to photograph well.....and we couldn't.  A prized shot of this bird has to either be eye-level or above-level.  If your neither, which is most of the case, you'll end up with a picture of a bright light-orange lower mandible.  The bird has a black upper mandible, and it's awesome to capture them both.  For the most part, the Greater Pewee turned his back on us today.


While this isn't a bad shot, it is below eye-level.  This gives the Greater Pewee an light-orange billed look only.  And this bird has a black upper mandible.  There were a few times that I had opportunities for the nice and prized shot, but with loose branches nearby and sloppy Tommy D footing, the shy Greater Pewee has a lot to wimp out at.


Gordon and I also heard something strangely wrong in the Greater Pewee's famous "Jose Maria" song.  All male Greater Pewee's (Jose's) commonly announce their love for their mates (Maria's) in the song Jose-Jose-Maria.  It's a high-pitched melody, one that most birds can't handle.  Jose's Olive-sided cousin loves to sing in a high pitched voice also in regards to drinking a lot of beer, but not about his mate.  Today, two Joses in the Pinals were singing lazy, and the "Maria" in the song sounded more like "Marie".  Gordon and I were both disgusted.  After all these years, we find out that the Greater Pewee is a cheater, and has left Maria for Marie.  Who is Marie?  I'm just joking, the male Greater Pewee's probably just don't care as much as the peak of breeding season has probably passed.  Perhaps the vocal cords need a rest (were talking about two syllables instead of three), but it really sounded like he was saying Marie.  Maybe birds get laryngitis too?  The Greater Pewee also gets offended very easily, even at harmless jokes.

"Sound travels in forests, even when you think your talking quietly.  No 'killer' photos for you".  

Here is an example of where I could've had a nice shot.  All the Greater Pewee had to do, was turn around!


Or look straight down at me or tilt his head sideways...


Most of the problem is me, I sometimes can't focus right.  This shot could've been awesome.  Could have been.  Both mandibles are in view!!!  


I guess these two turned out pretty good.  And you've gotta love the Greater Pewee's rad fro.



Climbing up mountains attempting to get above or at eye-level with a Greater Pewee is a challenging and tough exercise.  It's certainly a fun bird to observe and one I don't see often.  I think I'll get that chance for that killer shot some other time I hope, at least I got to observe this bird up close for a long time.  In climbing up the mountain in pursuit of that picture, some of the views were great.  These were some of many great views of the Pinal Mountains, so here is that time to show off some of the scenery from the place I got to bird today!








The Pinal Mountains are a great birding location and is one I should visit a lot more.  Who knows what you may find up here!  Thanks Gordon for an awesome and fun day of birding!