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CODE 5 ALERT... AMAZON KINGFISHER!

Amazon Kingfisher, San Benito TX 

IT'S NOT EVEN IN THE BOOK! A pleasant walk around Santa Ana NWR today was interrupted by news of a true mega, an Amazon Kingfisher. Once we figured out it was on a roadside only 10 minutes from Harlingen we chased it, arriving by the side of highway 100 near San Benito to find a crowd of other birders already gathered and watching it in trees on the opposite side of a resaco (Ox-bow lake) of the Rio Grande. With only one previous ABA area record (2010), a monstrously large bill and smart rifle green plumage it put smiles on a lot of faces today. A big thank you to the 'drive-by' finder Leica rep and friend Jeff Bouton as well as to the kind folks, including first lady Lizzie Gordon(!), who flagged down traffic on the busy highway to keep things safe for everyone. It was quite an event.

Santa Ana was nice too with my first Olive Sparrow, found naturally, skulking around in the brush by the side of one of the access roads, although it was otherwise rather quiet. Birds here included usual RGV specialities like White-tipped Dove, Long-billed Thrasher and Black-crested Titmouse and there were also a lot of butterflies on the wing, notably the gorgeous Mexican Bluewing. I had originally planned to go further up-river this morning, to Bentsen, which would have put me well away from the action, but was persuaded by Robert Kirk and friends to have a more sociable stroll around Santa Ana - does everything happen for a reason?

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RGV OPEN COUNTRY BIRDING

This young White-tailed Hawk had me reaching for Sibley

FOR A CHANGE I CRUISED SOME OF THE COUNTRY ROADS NORTHEAST OF HARLINGEN THIS MORNING. The vast fields were mostly water-logged so progress was tricky at times. No rarities but a very instructive young White-tailed Hawk brightened up my day (check the grey cere and finely barred tail and it was obviously a big buteo while still sitting on a fence post!)  and I finally dropped in to the car rental lot at Valley Airport (I have never flown there!) to see the incredible spectacle of hundreds of Bronzed Cowbirds sheltering in the shade of the cars, even perched on tyres under the wheel arches. The huge agricultural fields of Willacy County held some nice birds including flocks of noisy Sandhill Cranes, scattered Loggerhead Shrikes and American Kestrels as well as parties of Horned Larks and Lark Sparrows. The sunrise today in Harlingen was pretty spectacular too!

Bronzed Cowbirds

Lark Sparrows

RGV Birding Festival, Harlingen sunrise

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20TH RGV BIRDING FESTIVAL - EL CANELO RANCH

Outrageously gaudy even more or less straight out of the camera - Vermillion Flycatcher

RAIN WAS BUCKETING DOWN OVERNIGHT IN HARLINGEN as a cold front arrived from the north and this morning's field trip to the lovely El Canelo Ranch was probably too cold and windy to expect to see any owls. Despite testing conditions I still enjoyed some very nice birding with Shawneen Finnegan and Father Tom Pincelli. The highlights were some great views of Vermillion Flycatchers, a very co-operative Ladder-backed Woodpecker feeding low down in moss-covered mesquite and a tame Curve-billed Thrasher. Couch's Kingbird and Loggerhead Shrike were new for the trip as were Harris's Hawk, Common Ground Dove, Belted Kingfisher and Sprague's Pipit. New warbler species included a couple of gaudy Yellow-throateds and a young Chestnut-sided.  Lincoln's Sparrows skulked in the thickets and a few House Wrens scolded as we passed. The ranch is also home to some introduced mammals, notably Nilgai and Scimitar-horned Oryx. It is bizarre to see the latter flourishing here now that original populations in North Africa are now EIW!

Ladder-backed Woodpecker, El Canelo Ranch 

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INTO THE VALLEY... PAINTED REDSTART!

Painted Redstart (Brook County Rest Area, US281 south of Falfurrias)

PAINTED REDSTART WAS A GREAT WELCOME TO THE VALLEY! Well just north of it actually at the Brook County rest area on US281 south of Falfurrias. A world as well as an ABA area lifer for me it is one of several birds from south of the border in the valley at the moment that I will hopefully catch up with over the next few days. The redstart was hyper-active, hardly pausing for a moment and it was quite shy as well. However, it also has a contact call very similar to Yellow-browed Warbler, which made it easy to follow in the oaks of the rest area, between the toilet blocks and the 'watch for snakes' sign. That is when I could actually hear it above the noise of semis thundering past on both sides. The rest area appeared silent at first but was quite full of birds, with Green Jays, Golden-fronted Woodpeckers, Eastern Bluebirds, Black-crested Titmice, Yellow-rumped Warblers and Lesser Goldfinches. 

I had been trying to get into the mood for the Latino-flavoured Rio Grande Birding Festival by reading Cormac McCarthy's 'The Counselor' on the plane yesterday, set in the Texas/Mexican borderland about a guy who decides to do a one-off drug deal to set himself up for life, with disastrous consequences and I had Pitbull's 'Don't stop the party' blaring on the radio on the way down from Austin today, passing Crested Caracaras and Scissor-tailed Flycatchers. I also seem to have caught up with the TVs again, still making their way south.  After setting up the booth I had an hour or so with Robert Kirk and Erik Bruhnke at the Frontera Audubon thicket at Weslaco. There were some more valley specialties here like: Clay-coloured Thrush (at least three); White-tipped Dove; Ladder-backed Woodpecker; Great Kiskadee and Long-billed Thrasher but no Golden-crowned Warbler....yet. There were a few other warblers feeding quietly in the dense thicket, like Orange-crowned, Tennessee, Black-and-White, Ovenbird and Black-throated Green. The streets of Harlingen were full of Great-tailed Grackles as usual this evening at their pre-roost gatherings, draped over the telegraph wires with dark storm clouds behind them. The weather over the next few days could get interesting too.

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