The Black-chinned Hummingbird eggs hatched today.
Wednesday, April 28, 2021
Oasis activity
Tuesday, April 27, 2021
Migration frenzy
A seemingly endless procession of migrants stopped by for a drink and/or snack. But they didn't hang around, and I can't be everywhere at once. I missed seeing an Indigo Bunting and Hermit Warbler that other birders saw. I did see some colorful birds though.
And of course, many not so colorful. Can't wait to see what shows up tomorrow.
Monday, April 26, 2021
Migration in full swing
I wasn't able to be at the oasis for the last few days but I'm going early in the morning. Meanwhile, there have been quite a few birders visiting there. I monitor their ebird reports to see what's being seen. One visitor, Claudia Browning Anderson, took this photo of a pair of Ladder-backed Woodpeckers mating at the oasis. Pretty cool capture!
Friday, April 23, 2021
Son's progress
You may remember that a year or so ago my son, Leonardo, moved from Austin to Alpine, with the intention of soon retiring to the oasis and help me there. It's too much for me to take care of by myself anymore.
So he bought an extreme fixer upper mobile home which I've posted some photos of the work he's done on the interior. But the roof damage was so bad he decided to put a roof over the trailer. He installed the posts and built metal trusses alone without help. Today he installed the trusses by himself in a raging wind. He plans to lease the place out when he moves to the oasis.* (I've vacated the house and it's waiting on him.)
Thursday, April 22, 2021
Wednesday, April 21, 2021
Alpine consolation
Since I can't go to the oasis until tomorrow, I resolved to enjoy migration in Alpine today. About the time a group of birders (Naturalist Journeys) arrived, I had been talking to birder Bill Sain in the alley between our house and the habitat (Johnson Ponds) when I spied the elusive Wood Thrush that I had been seeking for the past week.* I was determined to photograph it, so I took a barely diagnostic shot of it in the shadows. Then, while trying to get everyone on it, it flew away. I knew the odds of relocating it were slim, but I pursued it across the street and down an alley to where some of the birders said it had landed in a tree. Here's the group in hot pursuit. I relocated it in the grass beneath the bare tree that's peaking out behind the white building.
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*On April 15 and/or 16 my husband saw it foraging under the grape arbor near where he was sitting on the patio. I was at the oasis, but my son was working in the workshop there. Hugh got my son to come look but Lee didn't have a camera on him. He later described it to me and I knew what it was. Then on the 18th, Jon McIntyre visited and got a photo of it. So I've been watching for it ever since. Yesterday, while photographing a Common Yellowthroat, I thought I saw it in my peripheral vision but couldn't locate it.
Monday, April 19, 2021
Yesterday's Big Sit Day 2021
The weather seems to always be cold for the Big Sit and this year was the worst. Raging wind and 40.° It finally warmed up to 70.° Because of covid the circle was 50 feet, instead of the usual 14 feet, so that helped some.
The oasis hosted a record four shorebirds, two Solitary Sandpipers and two Baird's Sandpipers.
Nashville Warbler |
Audubon's Yellow-rumped Warbler |
Dale Ohl and me with Mike Gray in the background |
Cecilia Riley, our team leader |
Saturday, April 17, 2021
Weather reversal
Yesterday it was 90° and very birdy. Today it was cold and windy. More birders than birds!
I guess the best species I saw today was Baird's Sandpiper (3). Not a new oasis species.
Friday, April 16, 2021
Elf Owls, migration, birds, birders....
I arrived at the oasis yesterday morning to discover the large agave that the Elf Owls were nesting in, when I last left the oasis, was lying on the ground. The four or five wires I had used to stabilize it were snapped in two. In my panic, I didn't take a photo, but enlisted some birders there to help stand it back up.
So, naturally, I was eager for nightfall to see if the owls were still using the same hole. Just at dusk I saw a Ladder-backed Woodpecker emerge from that hole, so was really bummed. But, lo and behold, a short while later the female owl stuck her head out the hole and the male perched nearby. Both were squawking vociferously. The oasis has 3 nesting pair. And it's funny about the pair east of my cabin. The hole is in a utility pole that the electric company installed about 5 years ago. When they installed the poles, they assured me they were woodpecker proof. Remember how worried I was that the owls wouldn't have places to nest so I made them leave up several of the old poles. Laughs on us!
Plumbeous Vireo |
Lazuli Bunting |
Solitary Sandpiper |
Sunday, April 11, 2021
The oasis today
It appears as if all the Huisache trees died, or froze back to the ground, during January's record cold. I want to get them all removed. There are plenty of lovely trees that survived. I don't want trees that aren't cold hardy enough. It's a waste of water too.
Nest in lower swatch of dead [oak] leaves |
Thursday, April 8, 2021
Warmer weather finally
The last couple of days have been in the 90°s. Feels good. Even a couple of butterflies are showing up. And my first dragonfly of the year. It was a Giant Darner, a species almost impossible to photograph as they don't land. Here's the first Queen butterfly for the year.
Also I was very lucky to locate a roosting Elf Owl yesterday. Birders were there that got to see it and add it to their life lists. The owl was hiding in my dormant Soapberry patch along the arroyo. It gives me great pleasure to be able to share such wonders.
Birder viewing his lifer Elf Owl |
Thursday, April 1, 2021
Feels more normal
With spring migration getting underway it's great to see a more normal oasis... even vehicles in the parking area, unlike last spring.
Claret Cup not yet in full bloom |