Thursday, January 12, 2006, 10:07 pm
The white-wings on Arkansas
ARLINGTON, TEXAS — As I’ve mentioned before, I’ve been relatively certain that there are White-winged Doves on Arkansas Lane. It’s not that they’re hard to ID, of course, but I’m always driving, and the only doves I can seem to get good looks at are Mourning Doves and Rock Pigeons.
But today, I saw a bird in flight, and this time it was clear as day. I hadn’t been imagining things all this time.
I haven’t seen white-wings anywhere else around — my apartment, other streets, farther east — and I thought surely this must be pushing the northern edge of their range.
So I cracked open Sibley once I got home, and sure enough, they aren’t “supposed” to be here, especially in winter. I know that they are expanding their range and that range maps are to be taken with a grain of salt — sometimes. But still, I was curious.
A quick search on Texbirds confirmed that white-wings spread to the Metroplex several years ago and that they are now seen in Arlington, even in January.
Not that the winter is hard on them, mind you. Today had the warm, damp feel of spring, and I left my window open far into the evening, until the seductive breeze had gotten colder and the sickening stench of a cigarette wafted up from somewhere below.
Wednesday, January 11, 2006, 11:29 pm
Looking whichways
ARLINGTON, TEXAS — Rock Pigeons. Great-tailed Grackles — bowling pins on wings. House Sparrows. Great Egret. Gull high away.
I’m always birding, but sometimes the commute is all the time I’ve got.
2005 was an unrepeatable year. Great Gray Owls, Evening Grosbeaks, Hudsonian Godwits, Willie-wagtails, White-tailed Tropicbird, Superb Fairywrens, Red-bellied Fruit-Doves. American Woodcock, Pyrrhuloxias, Chihuahuan Ravens. I didn’t manage to keep a year list, but it would have been sweet. I know there were over 100 life birds.
But after all that, my life list is still comparable to what one crazed birder can see in one oversized state in one very lucky year.
By the end of 2006, that sobering fact will no longer be true. I’m not keeping a list this year either. It’s fun … for the first day or two, and I always sort of wish I’d done it in the end. Maybe I’m too lazy, but I’d like to think it isn’t that.
Our New Year’s Day nightjar is likely to have been a Common Poorwill, according to some Texbirders, including Mark Lockwood. The species’ wintering habits are still poorly known. Evidently they can enter deep torpor and tough out some winters. It can’t be listed of course. Didn’t see it well enough for that, unfortunately.
My time in the United States (if all goes according to plan) is now measured in weeks, not months.
I won’t be sitting still for any of that time. I’m hoping for Snowy Owls and Florida Scrub-Jays, but who can say what the future holds.
Meanwhile, the British words keep ringing in my ears: “There are birds of paradise in Ukarumpa! I’ve seen four species on the ridge!”
Saturday, January 7, 2006, 11:06 am
All-the-time birds
ARLINGTON, TEXAS — “Ordinary” birds are far more colorful than we give them credit for. I’m working at home today — the first Saturday I’ve been home in a month or more. Proposals are due Monday, and I’m looking at people and lands from far across the sea. But the birds outside keep me anchored in my own time and place.
The cock robin has left the perch where he sat for long minutes, silently looking around. His deeply colored breast feathers had delicate fringes of white. His head was quite black, and his throat was streaked with white. His bill almost glowed, even in the shade, but it cooled to black near the tip.
A house sparrow had one pure white flight feather. It was nestled among the others, which were black and brightly edged with brown.
Yellow-rumps’ sides gleamed like beacons, and the glinting, fiery blue of the jays almost took my breath away. They pinned morsels against twigs with capable feet, and they pounded them with strong, hooked bills.
But they’ve all moved on for the moment, and only the distant roar of jets wafts through my slightly open window. That, and a gentle breeze. I should be getting back to work….
Sunday, January 1, 2006, 11:00 pm
Feather Bowl
GUADALUPE MOUNTAINS NP, TEXAS — I aimed my headlights at a Canyon Towhee. It was still dark, but the day had already begun. We’d seen two owls on the way in; one took off from the roadside, lifting what must have been a rabbit with it. As we walked toward the visitor center, the clouds glowed red over the desert. Not fiery. Sanguinary.
By the time we’d found an open campsite and hit Frijole Trail, the sun was up. The desert grassland glowed with colors too bright to be believed, and I rejoiced in the barbed margins of the sotols, the smooth bark and brilliant berries of the madrones, and the cubic bark of the junipers.
Birds were not abundant, but we encountered them in twos and threes. A Rock Wren flushed, pausing too briefly to admire, but its flight drew my eye to a Cactus Wren. Ladder-backed Woodpeckers kept to themselves. A sunny corner held at least four wrens: two rocks, a canyon, and a Bewick’s. Small flocks of juncos were common; the birds seemed generally hooded and pinkish-sided but did not, to my eye, display clear characteristics of any of the named populations. Single Rufous-crowned Sparrows moved too quickly for Courtney to see.
As we ascended, the winds grew ferocious, as if the mountain resented our daring presence. Unexpected gusts were strong enough to move our bodies, which made us just a bit uneasy as we eyed the canyon below.
In a flash, a brown bird exploded from the rockface by the path, flying past us and quickly disappearing. There was no time for optics, but we’d just seen a nightjar. Its tail corners were white, and the wings were unmarked.
But it’s the first of January!
A little farther on, we stopped to consult with Sibley. Sure enough, none of the nightjars are shown here in winter. After studying the illustrations, we agreed that neither of us had noted a Whip-poor-will’s gray “braces” on the back, though we couldn’t say for sure they hadn’t been there. The bird showed a reddish tone, as Courtney pointed out, and I made up my mind to research the mystery further.
The wind kept howling as we hiked on, and we could see the path we’d taken far below us, looking as if a child could have etched it into the mountain with a pebble.
I heard some high-pitched calls ahead and finally spotted a dark-faced gray bird. We approached the spot to find stunted trees alive with quickly moving Bushtits. There might have been 10, or maybe 20, and not one of them stayed still for a moment. A Mountain Chickadee joined the fray, and the whole flock moved down the mountain and out of sight.
As we reached the Bowl Trail, pinyon pines had become the rule, not the exception. But the wind whipped them violently, and I began to worry that we’d not see much of anything in such a terrible gale. As a vista opened to the desert below, we looked out into a vast and hazy world. Somewhere, the miles of desert and sky must have met, but the wind-whipped dust, or so we supposed it was, obscured that far-off horizon.
Trees grew taller as we continued, and a large, grayish chipmunk clung to a trunk, eyeing us warily. We heard faint calls, and a Red-breasted Nuthatch appeared, wedging a seed in a crevice and hacking away with its capable bill. Mountain Chickadees worked farther back in a pine, occasionally showing off their smart white eyebrows, and two or three other nuthatches moved back and forth in the trees. All red-breasted.
There followed a long stretch of apparently empty woodlands, and I began to be discouraged. We sat on a fallen log in the sunshine to eat peanut butter with our crackers, and the fire-cleared meadow around us seemed devoid of life. I kept thinking of all the species I’d hoped to see. Just as my despair bottomed out, I heard a call behind us. Birds!
Mountain Chickadees, specifically. We were soon surrounded by a flock of 15 or more, and I was interested by their low-pitched, wheezy calls. But Mountain Chickadees, delightful as they may be, had not been scarce so far, and I kept scanning the trees for something more.
Several tiny birds appeared in a distant pine. “Pygmy Nuthatches!” I exclaimed, though still barely able to see them for sure. I watched intently, just making out their gray-brown caps and pale blue backs. We walked toward the pine, but they had already begun moving left, disappearing in a cedar, then moving even farther in the direction we’d come from. We followed.
Then they were right overhead, scooting over the branches and squeaking their odd little calls. They, like the chickadees, probed the needles for insects, and when they turned, I could see a pale patch on each nape. Pygmy Nuthatches!
Spirits restored, we continued, encountering another Pygmy Nuthatch and a handful of white-breasteds. That made three nuthatches for the day — not bad at all. Four or five Acorn Woodpeckers moved rapidly through the treetops, and one paused on a bare limb just long enough to see.
I became aware that almost all of the juncos were gray with orangey-red backs, and I was intrigued by the difference in distribution we were observing. In the grasslands below, I had not seen even one reddish-backed bird. But up here, all but one or two of the birds I saw well did have reddish backs. Fascinating. I wanted to know more.
The last new species for the day was a Hairy Woodpecker who presented himself briefly before disappearing through the trees.
I admired the huge old Douglas-firs as we walked, studying their cones and lichen-encrusted bark. There were other cones too, and I wondered whose they were, but maybe I’ll learn some other day.
Of jays, finches, owls and other much-hoped-for species, I can say only this: They did not cross our path this New Year’s Day.




David J. Ringer

