Mexican Duck |
Gambel's Quail |
Chukar |
Dusky Grouse |
Clark's Grebe |
Band-tailed Pigeon |
Lesser Nighthawk |
Common Poorwill |
White-throated Swift |
Rivoli's Hummingbird |
Black-chinned Hummingbird |
Anna's Hummingbird |
Costa's Hummingbird |
Broad-billed Hummingibrd |
Calliope Hummingbird |
Ridgway's Rail |
California Gull |
California Condor |
Northern Goshawk |
Common Black Hawk |
Swainson's Hawk |
Zone-tailed Hawk |
Western Screech-Owl |
Northern Pygmy-Owl |
Mexican Spotted Owl |
Williamson's Sapsucker |
Red-naped Sapsucker |
Lewis's Woodpecker |
Acorn Woodpecker |
Gila Woodpecker |
American Three-toed Woodpecker |
Gilded Flicker |
Prairie Falcon |
Rosy-faced Lovebird |
Yellow-faced Lovebird |
Nanday Parakeet |
Hammond's Flycatcher |
Gray Flycatcher |
Black Phoebe |
Vermillion Flycatcher |
Ash-throated Flycatcher |
Cassin's Kingbird |
Western Kingbird |
Gray Vireo |
Hutton's Vireo |
Cassin's Vireo |
Plumbeous Vireo |
Pinyon Jay |
Stellar's Jay |
Woodhouse's Scrub-Jay |
Clark's Nutcracker |
Black-billed Magpie |
Violet-green Swallow |
Mountain Chickadee |
Bridled Titmouse |
Juniper Titmouse |
Bushtit |
Pygmy Nuthatch |
Rock Wren |
Canyon Wren |
Pacific Wren |
Black-tailed Gnatcatcher |
American Dipper |
Western Bluebird |
Mountain Bluebird |
Varied Thrush |
Bendire's Thrasher |
Le Conte's Thrasher |
Crissal Thrasher |
Sage Thrasher |
Phainopepla |
Olive Warbler |
Cassin's Finch |
Lesser Goldfinch |
Lawrence's Goldfinch |
Chestnut-collared Longspur |
McCown's Longspur |
Black-chinned Sparrow |
Brewer's Sparrow |
Harris's Sparrow |
Sagebrush Sparrow |
Lark Bunting |
Canyon Towhee |
Abert's Towhee |
Rufous-crowned Sparrow |
Green-tailed Towhee |
Hepatic Tanager |
Black-headed Grosbeak |
Lazuli Bunting |
Hooded Oriole |
Bullock's Oriole |
Scott's Oriole |
Bronzed Cowbird |
Lucy's Warbler |
Townsend's Warbler |
Painted Redstart |
Wednesday, March 13, 2019
Northern Arizona Birding - March 2019
When it comes to planning a vacation to an area that I've never been before, where there are more than one hundred lifers possible and about two dozen other species that I haven't seen in over 35 years, I'm like a kid in a candy store. With today's technology, such as eBird and Birds of North America (BNA) species accounts online, I've been able to plan the birding portion of our family vacation with many birds that I used to dream of seeing when I thumbed through the field guides as a teenager. Birds such as Clark's Nutcracker, Lewis's Woodpecker, Stellar's Jay, Vermillion Flycatcher, Phainopepla, Painted Redstart and many more. We are flying from Cincinnati to Phoenix via a connection and layover in Dallas/Fort Worth, then driving the next day to stay two nights in Tusayan just outside of the Grand Canyon then three nights in Sedona. I will be granted a half day of birding apart from family. My plan is to rise early to try for nocturnal birds such as Common Poorwill, Western Screech-Owl, Mexican Spotted Owl and some other specialty birds that may only be found in the Flagstaff area such as Clark's Nutcracker, Pinyon Jay and American Three-toed Woodpecker. Working my way down Oak Creek Canyon will be my best chance at American Dipper, Olive Warbler and Painted Redstart. In some of these areas Northern Pygmy-Owl may be possible during the day. I plan to finish up my morning and early afternoon in the Sedona area primarily at two or three hotspots, time permitting. These are Page Springs Fish Hatchery, Sedona Wetlands and Dead Horse Ranch State Park. The list of possible lifers, even when excluding vagrants and late migrants that could show up early, is close to 100 species. Below is the list of possible lifers, most of them expected there but a few are extremely rare. Updates to this blog with photos and commentary will be made while in Arizona.
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