19 April 2011

A Few More Scenery Images

Although the Grand Canyon is obviously my favorite, there are certainly other Arizona locations, and many in Utah, with great scenery. We visited the red rock formations surrounding Sedona, AZ on our way north from the Phoenix Area. One can certainly not quibble with the scenic grandeur of this area. But in spite of the beauty, I was disappointed at the intrusion of housing developments into the scenic views available in much of the countryside.After leaving the Grand Canyon, our next stop on the way north was Marble Canyon and the Vermilion Cliffs. The Colorado River in this canyon is much larger than it appears in this image. Numerous shades of reds dominate the rock formations comprising the Vermilion Cliffs.Our last scenic destination on the trip back to Montana was Bryce Canyon National Park. It had been perhaps 20 years since we last visited this area and it was high on our list for a return visit. We arrived there late in the afternoon, and by the time we found a motel and reached the park, it was approaching sunset. This is a high elevation area and there was lots of snow remaining and little in the way of young vegetation emerging from winter dormancy. But the scenery was as beautiful as ever. Too bad we did not have time to do some hiking among the "voodoos".
There are several other exquisite National Parks on our list of places to visit in Utah, but they will have to wait for another day.

16 April 2011

More Arizona Birds

While the scenery in much of Arizona is some of my favorite in the US, the Avifauna there is also hard to beat. Here are more examples of some pretty neat birds I encountered in Arizona in April!

These Gambel's Quail are probably my favorites! Only rarely can you find them sitting still or perched at a close enough distance for reasonable photo opportunities. At Lost Dutchman State Park east of Apache Junction, AZ, they are on the tame side likely because they are used to many people around. I found a bench out along a desert trail there and sat quietly for a while until these birds hopped up on nearby vegetation and posed for me.
Cactus wrens are usually fairly tame, but this double was an unusual opportunity.
As were these mourning doves sitting on an Ocotilla stem!
Costa's Hummingbirds were pretty common at Boyce Thompson Arboretum.
Cardinals were more accommodating than usual at the same location.
Scott's Orioles had just begun to arrive in AZ while we were there in early April.
Broad-billed Hummers were hitting the feeders frequently at a number of locations.
Black-throated Sparrows are one of my favorites of this group. This was posed for me at the San Pedro National Riparian Conservation Area.
Vermilion Flycatcher's are always an eye-catcher. There is something about those birds species with all of that red plumage!!
These Mexican Ducks are actually a sub-species of the Mallard where the male does not get the fancy breeding plumage.
Bird photography sure does add to my enjoyment of being outdoors!

13 April 2011

Portal & Cave Creek, AZ: I Love This Place!

Every birder likely has their favorite or at least a list of favorite birding location(s). In my case, the criteria for selecting these areas is often a bit fuzzy. But in the lower 48 states outside of Montana, one particular area usually always rises to the top of the list for me - the Chircahua Mountains of SE Arizona and more specifically Cave Creek and the area around the small berg of Portal. The lower portions of this area are quite dry, but as elevation increases - to over 9,000' - vegetation in the form of trees becomes prevalent. There were still patches of snow visible when we visited in early April. The mid-elevation portions are mostly an oak/conifer/grassland type. The riparian areas along Cave Creek and its South Fork are dominated by sycamore trees. Their splotchy white and gray bark mimics in tone the aspen and birch we have in northern climes, but their growth pattern is quite different.The rock formations in the highlands are especially colorful at sunrise and sunset. The small town of Portal, with perhaps several hundred residents, has lodging and eating facilities available which Kathy and I utilized this year.Excellent birding is available on a morning walk in town and on adjacent roads. This phainopepla male was eying me from the river bridge.
Blue-gray Gnatcatchers are always fun to watch as they flit through the trees gleaning insects from branches.
And then there are the abundant Cactus Wrens. They are always verbose in their efforts to assert territorial boundaries and attract mates.
Hutton's Vireos are a species I don't have much experience with but this one managed to pose a few seconds for me.
Acorn woodpeckers were quite abundant among the sycamore trees in town.
Mexican Jays seemed to be everywhere from low to at least mid-elevations.
Curve-billed Thrashers were perched up on shrubs early in the morning singing their melodious songs . There are literally hundreds of other species to be viewed and photographed in this wonderful portion of SE Arizona. Rest assured, I shall return!






10 April 2011

The Magnificent Grand Canyon!

Most of the National Parks that I have visited in the US have beautiful scenery and /or unique natural features that provide the basis for their unique status and recognition. But in my mind, none can compare to the Grand Canyon in Arizona. I'm not quite sure why the magnificence of this geological wonder appeals to me so much but its massive and extensive grandeur combined with a rainbow of embedded colors must be at the forefront of its appeal. I have only visited there on several occasions, but each time, I depart with the same sense of awe. When Kathy and I spent several days there last week, we were blessed with some of the clearest, crispest air we have ever encountered. While the weather was cool and a bit blustery, the glow of the canyon colors engendered a warmth in our minds and bodies!

Sunrise at Yaki Point, east of Grand Canyon Village, was not quite as colorful as we would have liked, but was, never-the-less, well worth the effort to catch the shuttle bus to the viewpoint at 5:30am.Birds were not a primary target of this visit, but, of course, I could not pass on the opportunity to grab a photo of one if they were cooperative. And this Western Scrub Jay enjoyed the canyon view with us for a few brief moments.About the only aspect of canyon views that in some ways is a little disturbing is the myriad of condensation trails in the blue sky above resulting from commercial jets heading to and from the large metro areas of the California coast. But the morning we were there, high altitude winds soon dispersed the trails into wispy cirrus clouds that perhaps added some nice detail to photo images of the canyon.

That is about all the dialogue I'll provide with this blog. The images should speak well for themselves!
If you have never had the opportunity to visit this natural, mostly unspoiled, geologic wonder, you should definitely add it to your "bucket list"!

08 April 2011

Plate River Sandhill Cranes

The harbinger of spring that I look forward to each year in Montana is the arrival of tens of thousands of snow geese that stop over at Freezout Lake for several weeks in late March and early April. Some years, upwards of a quarter million of them can be viewed on the ponds and in the surrounding grain fields. It is a great spectacle that is attended by more and more people each year. This year, Kathy and I decided to try a different spectacle - the sandhill cranes that stop along the Platte River in Nebraska during their migration north each March. It was a great decision on our part.

The Platte River originates in the mountains of Colorado and Wyoming and flows through the grasslands and farmlands of southern Nebraska, where it slows down and forms many islands and sandbars. These features along with adjacent fields mostly of corn provide ideal conditions for night-time security and daytime feeding for sandhill cranes. LOTS of cranes! Estimates are that during the peak of migration, upwards of a half million cranes can be found along the 60-70 mile section of the Platte from North Platte to Grand Island.

A late departure from Helena placed us in Buffalo, WY the first evening of our journey. With more than 600 miles to go to our destination, we departed early the next morning. By the time we reached North Platte, driving along the Interstate Highway, flocks of cranes could be seen in most all of the corn fields on either side of the highway. As we neared our destination of Kearney, Nebraska, late in the afternoon, I phoned Steve, my local contact, to discuss what we should do that evening. Steve was a very accommodating host and insisted that he meet me on the the river for an evening of crane watching. So instead of checking into our motel, we met Steve at a local truck stop and after exchanging introductions and pleasantries, he lead me through beautiful Platte River bottom-lands to the river. We were a little early for the cranes to begin arriving for their evening roost, but the weather was pleasant and the skies partly cloudy. It was a fortuitous decision to visit the river that evening because the weather would go down hill the next several days.

As the cranes began approaching the river, the setting sun reflected off of them as a gold-tinged glow. Remember, you can click on the image to enlarge it, and then click you back button to return to the blog. And then as the sun began to set, it was a gorgeous sight, with thousands of cranes settling in on islands just down river from us. It was not easy to come up with an estimate of numbers but there were likely tens-of-thousands by the time we parted the river.I was up early the next morning so that I could approach the river in darkness so as to not disturb any cranes that might have settled on islands closest to the shoreline. Unfortunately, it was quite cloudy and visibility was poor. About 100 yards from the river bank, I got on my hands and knees in the willows and worked my way toward the river where cranes were boisterously welcoming the first hint of dawn. Despite my efforts at caution, cranes on the island closest to shore detected my presence and flushed to join the other hoards a little farther from shore. But thousands remained within 150 yards or so. I chose a comfortable spot along the riverbank with some shrub cover for concealment and waited for more light to illuminate the river and birds. As darkness began to recede, the sight and sounds of thousands of sandhill cranes roosting on the islands before me was fantastic. Freezout snow geese, your spectacle has been matched and - in my mind - surpassed.
One aspect of this Platte River crane spectacle is that, unlike some other birding excursions, there is not much "down time". After the morning departure show, cranes can be found in the myriad cornfields along 60+ miles of river area. Besides just being able to watch thousands of birds as they feed, you can occasionally get lucky -as we were - and find some cranes involved in their unique courting rituals. These rituals involve various forms of bowing, jumping in the air, wing flapping, and picking up pieces of vegetation and throwing them in the air. Very entertaining viewing!!

The last evening we were there, Kathy and Steve's wife Leisa joined us on the river. That evening, in spite of some rain and snow showers, the crane show was even more spectacular than the night before. My estimate for the evening was 40,000+ cranes settling on islands not far down river from where we were sitting. The next morning, we awoke to several inches of snow on the ground so my crane viewing exploits were over for this trip. Click on the video clip below. Please excuse the poor quality.

The Platte River Crane show really may be one of the great spectacles of nature in the world! If you get the opportunity to witness it, you will have no regrets!