A Magical Day

Posted Oct 8th, 2006 at 2:37 pm in Birding, Photography

I went birding for a short time with my wife yesterday to the north unit of the San Angelo State Park in west Texas. For those of you that are birders, you’ll understand that there are rare days that are just magical. Yesterday was just such a day.

Ringed Kingfisher

I was hearing a kingfisher chattering in the distance. Not its full machine gun fire call, but just individual chattering notes. After walking through the brush and peering out along the Concho River, I spotted this guy (or rather girl). It’s a Ringed Kingfisher, the largest new world kingfisher that ranges throughout Latin America, barely reaching south Texas. They’ve been straying north, seemingly with greater regularly, with sightings from central Texas. This is perhaps the third sighting and first photographic record for the Concho Valley.

Ringed Kingfisher

Black-throated Blue Warbler

That alone would have made it an incredible day, but the magic wasn’t done. We walked down to a dry spot on the river to try and refind the kingfisher, when my wife pointed out a small passerine bird coming down to the water’s edge. I was somewhat distracted, still looking for the kingfisher. When the bird finally hopped out into view, my jaw hit the ground. A male Black-throated Blue Warbler, one of two regularly occurring U.S. warbler species I’d not seen, hopped in view to get a drink. This is a hard bird to find anywhere in Texas, but when it does show up, it’s usually on the southeast coast. They breed in the northeast and winter in the West Indies, so most migrate down the eastern seaboard and miss Texas all together. As far as I know, this is the first record for the Concho Valley.

Black-throated Blue Warbler

I’ve also put up lots more pictures of both birds in the photo gallery.

When it was all said and done, I’d seen a couple of highly unlikely birds within the span of 15 minutes. When you least expect it, birds can really surprise you.

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4 Responses to “A Magical Day”

  1. So I’m guessing that the one you haven’t seen is Kirtland’s Warbler? How odd that BTB would be so elusive for you. It seems like a common bird to me. But, of course, it’s not that hard to see in places I’ve lived.

    Interesting that the male retains its striking plumage in the off season.

  2. No Joe, I’ve seen Kirtland’s. The only regularly occurring U.S. warbler I’ve not seen is now Connecticut Warbler. Those Oporornis are skulking nightmares to find. Like Black-throated Blue, it’s a West Indies winterer, so it’s migration doesn’t take it through Texas, and there are only 8 documented records in the state.

  3. Wow! You got great shots! The Black-throated Blue is just incredible!

  4. A day out of the box, pictures to prove it too!

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