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Journal
(Blog)



Winter Birding Southeast Arizona: Hereford, February 2022

2/28/2022

4 Comments

 
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Male Pyrrhuloxia, Battiste Bed, Breakfast and Birds, Hereford, Arizona, February 15, 2022.

Drive an hour and a half southeast of  Tucson, and you will arrive at Battiste Bed, Breakfast and Birds in Hereford Arizona.  This exceptional B and B is run by Tony Battiste and his wife Julie.  Tony is an exceptional bird expert and guide (retired), and he and his wife have a great B and B south of Sierra Vista and very close to a number of birding hotspots: Ash Canyon Bird Sanctuary, Miller Canyon, Carr Canyon, Ramsey Canyon, and ​​Garden Canyon in Ft. Huachuca.  Enjoy great accommodations and warm and friendly hosts while birding the area. 
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Tony has multiple feeders on the east side of his property along with a two seat photo blind, in addition to generous seating for non-photographers. The feeders have a natural appearance with a minimum of plastic and steel. He stocks the feeders at sunrise with seeds, nectar, and his own home made suet, which brings the birds in.  Sitting in the blind you will notice the sun rising to your right, creating excellent lighting. During our two night stay, we found our most productive birding right in Tony's yard, as evidenced by the photos in this post. 

Below is a detail map of the location of Battiste Bed, Breakfast and Birds, (right at the square with "45" in the middle, from Adobe Lightroom). Fort Huachuca is off the map to the top and left, a 25 minute drive. 

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Northern Cardinal


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Canon R6, RF 100-500 mm at 500 mm, f/7.1, 1/800 sec, ISO 200.

It is hard to find someone who does not like Northern Cardinals; after all, they are the state bird of 7 states in the U.S., and the name/mascot for multiple sports teams.  They live year round throughout the east coast, west into the plains states, and southwest into Texas, and southern New Mexico and Arizona.  The males derive their red color from carotenoids in their diet and don't molt into duller plumage during the year.  After a snowfall, northerners commonly see a flash of red on white at their feeders. 

Northern Cardinals are songbirds (Order: Passiformes) in the Family Cardinalidae, along with 14 other species, including Pyrrhuloxia, Tanagers, Grosbeaks and Buntings. 

The male is red with black around the orange conical shaped bill. He sports a red crest.  The birds we see here are enjoying Tony's special suet blend, and warming up in the sun.  (It was in the 30's when I crawled into the blind). 

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Below we see the female Northern Cardinal:  same orange conical bill, grey to black around the bill, and the characteristic crest. 

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Canon R6, RF 100-500 mm at 500 mm, f/9.0, 1/1250 sec, ISO 1600.

Above and below, female Northern Cardinal enjoying breakfast. 

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Canon R6, RF 100-500 mm at 500 mm, f/7.1, 1/800 sec, ISO 640.

Pyrrhuloxia


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Canon R6, RF 100-500 mm at 500 mm, f/7.1, 1/2000 sec, ISO 1000.

The Pyrrhuloxia is one of the 14 species in the Family Cardinalidae.  They live year round in southern Texas, New Mexico and Arizona, and into northern Mexico including the tip of Baja California.  They have a distinctive crest, red and gray coloration, and a bill that is parrot-like with a curved culmen on the upper edge for cracking seeds.  

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The image below is not the sharpest, but I love catching birds in flight when I can. The UFO to the lower right of the frame is part of a hummingbird feeder. 

For the photo geeks: note that the tail is still in focus as he flies into the distance, but nevertheless the viewers eye is drawn to the birds eye, which is not sharp, and makes this photo less an optimal.  Oh, and the UFO. 

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Canon R6, RF 100-500 mm at 500 mm, f/9.0, 1/2000 sec, ISO 1000.

Two more shots of the male, below, sitting on a cactus, and in flight. In the image directly below, the grayish bill (in contrast to orange of the Cardinal) is evident along with the parrot like culmen.   To my eye, these birds look a bit like small parrots. 

The inflight photo that follows is not sharp, but fun.

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Canon R6, RF 100-500 mm at 500 mm, f/7.1, 1/2000 sec, ISO 5000.

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Canon R6, RF 100-500 mm at 500 mm, f/7.1, 1/2000 sec, ISO 5000.

The 5 images below show the female Pyrrhuloxia, same general characteristics as the male, but less red. 

To my eye, Pyrrhuloxia have a definite "cute factor" not shared by Cardinals. 

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Canon R6, RF 100-500 mm at 500 mm, f/9.0, 1/1000 sec, ISO 640.

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Many thanks to Tony Battiste for his help with bird identification, especially the parrot-like bill in the Pyrrhuloxia.

Yellow-rumped Warblers: Audubon's and Myrtle's


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Canon R6, RF 100-500 mm at 500 mm, f/7.1, 1/2000 sec, ISO 2000.

Yellow-rumped Warblers live in almost very corner of North America, Central America and the Caribbean.   In the range map to the right, blue is wintering ground, orange breeding, yellow migration, and purple year round.   The species is divided into two major sub-species:  Audubon's, which we see in large number in the west, and Myrtle's, present on the east coast.   This winter we have been seeing both sub-species in Arizona. 

Most warblers eat exclusively insects, and migrate into Mexico during the winter to find food.  However the Yellow-rumped is able to eat fruit allowing it to winter across a wider territory including SE Arizona.  
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From Cornell Lab All About Birds.
The bird above at the lead and below is an Audubon's, with characteristic yellow "arm pits" , rump, and throat.  The yellow on the rump is just barely visible. 

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Canon R6, RF 100-500 mm at 500 mm, f/7.1, 1/2000 sec, ISO 640.

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The Myrtle subspecies was visiting as well, seen in the images below as a group.  The throat is white with a hint of yellow on the crest.

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Canon R6, RF 100-500 mm at 500 mm, f/7.1, 1/2000 sec, ISO 1250.

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Mexican Jay


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Canon R6, RF 100-500 mm at 500 mm, f/7.1, 1/2000 sec, ISO 640.

The Mexican Jay is a song bird (Passiformes) in the Corvid family,  one of 133 species in the family, along with jays, crows and ravens. Mexican Jays live communally in family groups of up to 25 individuals, and stay together throughout their lives.  Their range is central mountainous Mexico up into SE Arizona and western New Mexico, and into very southern Texas.  They are year round residents and regulars in birding hot spots such as Hereford and Madera Canyon. 

The Corvid family is known for its intelligence, including use of tools.  For more on these remarkable birds, see the books by Jennifer Ackerman, The Genius of Birds (Penguin 2016) and The Bird Way (Penguin 2020), as well as the observations of the renowned scientist Bernd Heinrich, Mind of the Raven (HarperCollins 1999). 

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These jays are quite tolerant of human activity, and will frequent feeders in groups.  In the spring of 2018 we encountered a group foraging for nesting material in Madera Canyon. For more on that see Madera Canyon Early Spring 2018.​

Inca Dove


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Canon R6, RF 100-500 mm at 500 mm, f/7.1, 1/2000 sec, ISO 1250.

Inca Doves are small and slender birds with a long, square-tipped tail and a small head.  The species has a thin and slightly drooping bill  and short legs.

The Inca Dove is the color of desert sand, with tan feathers edged in dark brown, creating a scaly pattern over the entire body.  The underparts and face are paler than the back.  The underwings are a rich chestnut as evident here, and the outer tail feathers are white, generally seen in flight.

Inca Doves live year round in Central America, Mexico, and the southern portions of Arizona, New Mexico, and Texas. (Reference, All About Birds).
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Cornell Lab All About Birds.

Curve-billed Thrasher


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Canon R6, RF 100-500 mm at 500 mm, f/7.1, 1/800 sec, ISO 2000.

Curve-billed Thrashers are song-birds (Passiformes) in the family Mimidae, along with Mockingbirds and other Thrashers.   They live year round in Mexico and as far north as southern Arizona, New Mexico and Texas.  Their long decurved bill is the perfect tool to eat insects, spiders, snails, fruits and seeds in their desert home. 

They will come to feeder stations, and seem tolerant of human activity.  For more, see my post from spring 2017 with photos of a nest with fledglings, Happy Easter and Joyous Passover . . .


​
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Cornell Lab All About Birds.

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Northern Mockingbird


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Canon R6, RF 100-500 mm at 500 mm, f/7.1, 1/2000 sec, ISO 1600.

Here comes another member of the Mimidae family, the Northern  Mockingbird.  They are slim songbirds with very long tails, and an uncanny ability to imitate sounds - the songs of other birds, as well as popular songs. This skill, called vocal learning, is rare in the animal world, and thus far found only in mockingbirds, parrots, hummingbirds, songbirds, bell-birds, a few marine mammals, bats, and one primate, humans.  For more on vocal learning, see Jennifer Ackerman's outstanding book, The Genius of Birds, Chapter 5, Four Hundred Tongues. (Penguin 2016).
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Cornell Lab, All About Birds. 
The Northern Mockingbird continues to learn songs during its lifetime, and may end up with a repertoire of 200 songs.  It  lives throughout the continental U.S., Mexico and the Caribbean.  Diet consists of insects in the summer, with a switch to fruit in the fall and winter, explaining the bird's wide year round range.  

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Gambel's Quail


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Canon R6, RF 100-500 mm at 500 mm, f/7.1, 1/2000 sec, ISO 800.

Gambel's Quail are in the family Odontophoridae, or, New World Quail. They live in sections of the southwest as shown on the range map.  They nest on the ground, and may have clutches of up to 12 eggs, which hatch all at once. The young are considered precocious; as soon as they hatch they are up and out of the nest following mom around the desert floor foraging for seeds.  These quail caravans are common in the spring and quite entertaining to watch.  They eat seeds, fruit and insects, and stay close to the ground, preferring to run rather than fly.  This male came by to eat seeds Tony had spread out on a log.
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Cornell Lab All About Birds.

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Cactus Wren


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Canon R6, RF 100-500 mm at 500 mm, f/7.1, 1/1800 sec, ISO 800.

Let's finish with the Arizona State bird, the Cactus Wren.*   

The Cactus Wren is a desert dweller, living year-round in Mexico, Arizona, Nevada and New Mexico. The bird is well adapted to desert living, eating insects and fruit, and able to survive without drinking free-standing water.   They are noisy, uttering a raw scratchy sound, as though they are trying to start on old Ford.  They are visually stunning birds, and happy posing on the top of cacti in the sun, when they are not foraging for insects. 

*For readers interested in a full listing of all of the U.S. state birds, Wikipedia comes to the rescue: List of U.S. state birds. 

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That's a wrap for Hereford and Battiste Bed, Breakfast and Birds!  I have more in store from the San Pedro River and Madera Canyon, which I hope to get out in March.

Happy Trails! 

4 Comments

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    Henry Johnson, photographer and author of this site. For more detail, see About

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  • Home
  • Blog
  • Visitor's Guide
    • Seasons
  • Birding Hotspots
    • Agua Caliente
    • Madera Canyon
    • Mt Lemmon
    • Portal, AZ
    • Sweetwater Wetlands
    • Texas Coast
    • White Water Draw
  • Birds
    • Acorn Woodpecker
    • American Bittern
    • American Coot
    • American Kestrel
    • American Robin
    • Arizona Woodpecker
    • Ash-throated Flycatcher
    • Black and White Warbler
    • Black-crowned Night-Heron
    • Black Phoebe
    • Black-throated Sparrow
    • Cactus Wren
    • Cedar Waxwing
    • Chihuahuan Raven
    • Common Raven
    • Cooper's Hawk
    • Crested Caracara
    • Curve-billed Thrasher
    • Elf Owl
    • Gambel's Quail
    • Gila Woodpecker
    • Great Blue Heron
    • Great Horned Owl
    • Green-tailed Towhee
    • Hooded Oriole
    • House Finch
    • Ladder-backed Woodpecker
    • Lazuli Bunting
    • Lesser Goldfinch
    • Northern Cardinal
    • Northern Flicker
    • Northern Mockingbird
    • Northern Shoveler
    • Phainopepla
    • Pied-billed Grebe
    • Plumbeous Vireo
    • Red-naped Sapsucker
    • Red-tailed Hawk
    • Rufous Hummingbird
    • Sandhill Crane
    • Sulfur-bellied Flycatcher
    • Verdin
    • Vermilion Flycatcher
    • White-crowned Sparrow
    • White-winged Dove
    • Williamson's Sapsucker
    • Yellow-rumped Warbler
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