Monday, December 31, 2007

Anzalduas County Park, 12/30/07

I checked out Anzalduas County Park yesterday hoping to find some Mexican vagrant (bird that is!). Didn't find anything great but it was still a pleasant morning. This American Bittern greeted me at the entrance.

Image and video hosting by TinyPic

Eastern Buebird is hard to find in the Rio Grande Valley. This was my first of the year.

Image and video hosting by TinyPic

Black Phoebe is at the eastern end of its range in the Valley.

Image and video hosting by TinyPic

American Wigeon 1
Blue-winged Teal 8
Pied-billed Grebe 2
Double-crested Cormorant 2
Anhinga 1
American Bittern 1
Great Blue Heron 1
Great Egret 1
Black Vulture 2
Turkey Vulture 30
Harris's Hawk 4
Gray Hawk 1
Common Moorhen 2
American Coot 10
Killdeer 5
Spotted Sandpiper 3
Long-billed Curlew 2
Ring-billed Gull 1
Rock Pigeon 50
Mourning Dove 25
Inca Dove 8
White-tipped Dove 4
Golden-fronted Woodpecker 5
Ladder-backed Woodpecker 6
Northern Beardless-Tyrannulet 4
Black Phoebe 1
Eastern Phoebe 1
Vermilion Flycatcher 1
White-eyed Vireo 1
Blue-headed Vireo 1
Green Jay 10
Black-crested Titmouse 6
House Wren 1
Ruby-crowned Kinglet 10
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher 10
Eastern Bluebird 3
Northern Mockingbird 6
American Pipit 25
Orange-crowned Warbler 8
Black-throated Green Warbler 6
Pine Warbler 1
Black-and-white Warbler 2
Common Yellowthroat 5
Chipping Sparrow 5
Savannah Sparrow 9
Northern Cardinal 15
Eastern Meadowlark 20
American Goldfinch 5

Weslaco Christmas Bird Count, 12/29/07

Honey and I covered the Llano Grande flood channel as usual for the Weslaco Christmas Bird Count. Birding ws a little slow, with passerines hard to come by. We had only 92 species for the day in our area. But the other areas came through for a preliminary count total of 164 species. Lots of Black-bellied Whistling Ducks greeted us.

Image and video hosting by TinyPic

This Fulvous Whistling Duck was the only one seen on the count.

Image and video hosting by TinyPic

We got a few other good birds like Groove-billed Ani, Burrowing Owl and Sprague's Pipit but our best bird was this Short-eared Owl. I had found it the afternoon before and was lucky to refind it for the count.

Image and video hosting by TinyPic

Black-bellied Whistling-Duck 1955
Fulvous Whistling-Duck 1
Gadwall 15
Mottled Duck 2
Blue-winged Teal 26
Northern Shoveler 530
Green-winged Teal 96
Ruddy Duck 3
Least Grebe 6
Pied-billed Grebe 1
American White Pelican 134
Neotropic Cormorant 12
Double-crested Cormorant 9
Great Blue Heron 53
Great Egret 7
Snowy Egret 17
Little Blue Heron 2
Tricolored Heron 2
Cattle Egret 2
Black-crowned Night-Heron 14
Turkey Vulture 25
Osprey 1
White-tailed Kite 2
Northern Harrier 4
Sharp-shinned Hawk 1
Harris's Hawk 4
Red-tailed Hawk 2
American Kestrel 8
Merlin 1
Peregrine Falcon 2
Common Moorhen 32
American Coot 34
Killdeer 32
Black-necked Stilt 48
American Avocet 85
Spotted Sandpiper 3
Long-billed Curlew 27
Least Sandpiper 97
Stilt Sandpiper 61
Long-billed Dowitcher 251
Caspian Tern 1
Rock Pigeon 34
Mourning Dove 27
Common Ground-Dove 3
Groove-billed Ani 6
Burrowing Owl 1
Short-eared Owl 1
Common Pauraque 1
Golden-fronted Woodpecker 2
Eastern Phoebe 2
Vermilion Flycatcher 2
Great Kiskadee 6
Tropical Kingbird 2
Loggerhead Shrike 3
Tree Swallow 28
House Wren 6
Marsh Wren 2
Ruby-crowned Kinglet 1
Northern Mockingbird 5
Long-billed Thrasher 1
American Pipit 105
Orange-crowned Warbler 12
Common Yellowthroat 65
Olive Sparrow 1
Savannah Sparrow 50
Lincoln's Sparrow 32
Swamp Sparrow 4
Northern Cardinal 1
Red-winged Blackbird 35
Great-tailed Grackle 40
Brown-headed Cowbird 3

Thursday, December 27, 2007

Western Hidalgo County, 12/27/07

Honey and I started birding this morning along "Sparrow Road", more properly known as Hwy 2221. This road starts on the west side of La Joya and goes north though desert scrub and agricultural fields. We didn't find anything fantastic but I did get my first Hidalgo Co. Say's Phoebe for the year. Sparrows were way down with only a few Black-throated, Cassin's, Vesper and Savannah Sparrows. Here's a Cassin's Sparrow.

Image and video hosting by TinyPic

We also had about 15 Pyrrhuloxias. They seem to be in higher than usual numbers this year.

Image and video hosting by TinyPic

The dirt roads in the area were poor for birding as the heavy trucks servicing the natural gas fields stirred up billows of dust as they sped by. Having received no rain for the last few months every plant along the roadside was coated in dust. So we didn't see as much as I had hoped for.

We got our best bird, this juvenal dark phase Ferruginous Hawk, a bit farther north at McCook. The white webbing in the primaries made it easy to identify. This is only the fourth I've ever seen in the Valley.

Image and video hosting by TinyPic

Image and video hosting by TinyPic

Image and video hosting by TinyPic

We also found a couple of Peregrine Falcons. Twenty five years ago it was a special day if you saw a Peregrine. Now they are expected on every trip.

Image and video hosting by TinyPic

Woops, Back to 499?

My ID of the Balmorhea jaegers as Parasitic may have been premature. Martin Reid, who knows his seabirds, thinks they are Pomarine Jaegers. He based this on bill size and general jizz. I did think the bill looked a bit large even from a distance. Unfortunately Martin only got distant looks like I did. Hope someone else can get a better view.

Monday, December 24, 2007

West Texas quest for 500, 12/21-23/07

Having not added a new bird for my Texas List since August, Honey and I headed out to west Texas hoping to see the Golden-crowned Sparrow and Parasitic Jaegers found last weekend. My last day of school was Thursday, so we headed off dark and early on Friday morning to Robert Lee, north of San Angelo, about 500 miles from Weslaco, for the Golden-crowned Sparrow. We found the spot that had been well described on TEXBIRDS and found the bird after a few minutes. Texas bird #497. He's a cutie!

Image and video hosting by TinyPic

After spending the night in the thriving metropolis of Pecos we headed up to Red Bluff Lake to have a look see. The cold front was passing through at the same time and made for difficult birding. The lake was a freezing, churning, frothy mess of whitecaps. We had a few interesting things like Horned and Eared Grebes and a few Common Goldeneyes and other ducks

Image and video hosting by TinyPic

Then we headed south to Lake Balmorhea making a few unsuccessful forays though the worst looking desert for Sage Sparrows along the way. At Lake Balmorhea it didn't take long to find the two jaegers. I'm calling them Parasitic Jaegers since that the one I need for the Texas list. Also Parasitic Jaeger is what most winter jaegers on southwest reservoirs are identified as. They had a single large pale patch on the underside of the primaries. So they're #498. And if you don't like that, what are you gonna do about it?

Image and video hosting by TinyPic Image and video hosting by TinyPic

There were ton's of other cool waterfowl like these Snow and Ross' Geese.

Image and video hosting by TinyPic

Snow Goose 100
Ross's Goose 10
Canada Goose 30
Gadwall 15
American Wigeon 5
Mallard 5
Northern Shoveler 3
Northern Pintail 5
Green-winged Teal 5
Bufflehead 5
Common Goldeneye 1
Common Merganser 4
Common Loon 1
Westrn/Clark's Grebe 20
Pied-billed Grebe 1
Eared Grebe 2
American White Pelican 50
Double-crested Cormorant 15
Great Blue Heron 12
Great Egret 1
Snowy Egret 2
Northern Harrier 1
Red-tailed Hawk 1
Golden Eagle 1
American Kestrel 2
Prairie Falcon 1
American Coot 30
Spotted Sandpiper 1
Greater Yellowlegs 2
Bonaparte's Gull 20
Ring-billed Gull 40
Parasitic Jaeger 2
Eurasian Collared-Dove 5
Say's Phoebe 2
Canyon Wren 1
Ruby-crowned Kinglet 2
American Pipit 1
Yellow-rumped Warbler 5
White-crowned Sparrow 10

After a frosty night in Alpine we headed to the spot south of Marfa where Mark Lockwood had several Baird's Sparrow a few years ago. I walked quite a bit of fenceline along the road but failed to kick up any sparrows. The red sedge they tend to hang out in had been mowed along the highway. Too bad all the state of Texas is privately owned. There was lots of great looking habitat across the fence. But it wasn't a total loss as a nice flock of about 50 Chestnut-collared Longspurs flew low overhead and bounded into the grasslands. #499!

Rather than waste more time on the Baird's Sparrows we decided to head up into the Davis Mountains. We were not dissappointed as the famous Madera Canyon picnic area north of Fort Davis yielded several Golden-crowned Kinglets and Red-breasted and White-breasted Nuthatches.

Image and video hosting by TinyPic

Then from out of the top of a large pine flew a noisy flock of six finchlike birds. I immediately recognized the enthusiastic kip-kip calls. Red Crossbills! Texas bird #500! Luckily they landed in response to my pygmy owl calls. As a beginning birder in the late 70's, Red Crossbill was the first rare bird I ever found. I encountered a flock in the Mark Twain National Forest near Paddy Creek in the Ozarks of Missouri. What a thrill for a new birder!

Image and video hosting by TinyPic

Image and video hosting by TinyPic

After all, we were birding in Texas so here's some cows.

Image and video hosting by TinyPic

Monday, December 17, 2007

Delta Lake, 12/16/07

Yesterday Honey and I participated in the La Sal Vieja Christmas Bird Count in northeastern Hidalgo County. We covered our usual area around Delta Lake and despite a near freezing start of about 35 degrees we still managed to find 102 species. The count total will probably be near last year's total of 166. Best for us were a Northern Beardless Tyrannulet and a Northern Waterthrush. As usual we found plenty of warblers including three Yellow Warblers in their usual area where the highway crossed the lake and an amazing ten Yellow-throated Warblers. You couldn't swing a dead cat without hitting a Northern Cardinal...we had 122 of "em.

Image and video hosting by TinyPic

Image and video hosting by TinyPic

This Least Flycatcher was a nice find.

Image and video hosting by TinyPic

Mr. Photogenic.

Image and video hosting by TinyPic

Black-bellied Whistling-Duck 266
Greater White-fronted Goose 42
Snow Goose 90
Ross's Goose 7
Gadwall 27
Mottled Duck 10
Blue-winged Teal 15
Northern Shoveler 1
Northern Pintail 8
Lesser Scaup 16
Ruddy Duck 92
Northern Bobwhite 8
Least Grebe 1
Pied-billed Grebe 4
American White Pelican 7
Neotropic Cormorant 50
Double-crested Cormorant 350
Anhinga 1
Great Blue Heron 14
Great Egret 8
Snowy Egret 1
Black-crowned Night-Heron 2
Black Vulture 2
Turkey Vulture 15
Osprey 2
White-tailed Kite 1
Northern Harrier 9
Sharp-shinned Hawk 1
Harris's Hawk 3
White-tailed Hawk 1
Red-tailed Hawk 1
Crested Caracara 11
American Kestrel 7
Merlin 1
Common Moorhen 2
American Coot 10
Sandhill Crane 157
Killdeer 18
Spotted Sandpiper 6
Greater Yellowlegs 1
Long-billed Curlew 1
Least Sandpiper 1
Laughing Gull 800
Ring-billed Gull 20
Eurasian Collared-Dove 2
Mourning Dove 73
Inca Dove 29
Common Ground-Dove 6
White-tipped Dove 1
Buff-bellied Hummingbird 1
Belted Kingfisher 2
Green Kingfisher 1
Golden-fronted Woodpecker 31
Ladder-backed Woodpecker 9
Northern Beardless-Tyrannulet 1
Least Flycatcher 1
Eastern Phoebe 8
Vermilion Flycatcher 2
Great Kiskadee 22
Couch's Kingbird 2
Loggerhead Shrike 1
White-eyed Vireo 9
Blue-headed Vireo 3
Green Jay 19
Horned Lark 6
Tree Swallow 25
Black-crested Titmouse 5
Verdin 5
Carolina Wren 4
Bewick's Wren 3
House Wren 25
Marsh Wren 4
Ruby-crowned Kinglet 36
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher 23
Northern Mockingbird 31
Long-billed Thrasher 9
Curve-billed Thrasher 4
European Starling 10
Orange-crowned Warbler 66
Yellow Warbler 3
Yellow-rumped Warbler 49
Yellow-throated Warbler 10
Black-and-white Warbler 3
Northern Waterthrush 1
Common Yellowthroat 42
Wilson's Warbler 1
Cassin's Sparrow 6
Chipping Sparrow 1
Clay-colored Sparrow 1
Vesper Sparrow 8
Lark Sparrow 13
Savannah Sparrow 187
Lincoln's Sparrow 9
Swamp Sparrow 5
Northern Cardinal 122
Pyrrhuloxia 11
Red-winged Blackbird 291
Western Meadowlark 21
Great-tailed Grackle 169
Brown-headed Cowbird 1
Lesser Goldfinch 2
House Sparrow 245

Saturday, December 8, 2007

Banded Orange Heliconian at Bentsen WBC, 12/08/07

This afternoon Honey and I decided to head over to the NABA Butterfly Park to see if we could see some of the great stuff they've had this fall, in particular the One-spotted Prepona. Well, we stuck out on that but while we were there we got word that a Banded Orange Heliconian had just been found at the nearby Bentsen State Park World Birding Center. What a fantastic butterfly! It's a rare vagrant from Mexico.

Image and video hosting by TinyPic

Image and video hosting by TinyPic

Image and video hosting by TinyPic

Image and video hosting by TinyPic

This Two-barred Flasher was pretty cool.

Image and video hosting by TinyPic

Image and video hosting by TinyPic

This Glazed Pellicia was new for me. I just couldn't get it to pose right. Look at the hairs on its wings.

Image and video hosting by TinyPic

Llano Grande flood channel, 12/08/07

This morning I checked out the Llano Grande flood channel immdeiately south of Estero Llano Grande State Park. There were lots of birds in the water but nothing unusual.

Image and video hosting by TinyPic

Image and video hosting by TinyPic

Black-bellied Whistling-Duck 500
Fulvous Whistling-Duck 1
Gadwall 6
Mottled Duck 4
Blue-winged Teal 15
Northern Shoveler 300
Green-winged Teal 50
Ruddy Duck 1
Northern Bobwhite 12
Pied-billed Grebe 1
American White Pelican 250
Neotropic Cormorant 1
Double-crested Cormorant 6
Anhinga 1
Great Blue Heron 32
Great Egret 5
Snowy Egret 5
Little Blue Heron 2
Tricolored Heron 1
Black-crowned Night-Heron 2
Roseate Spoonbill 10
Black Vulture 2
White-tailed Kite 3
Northern Harrier 3
American Kestrel 1
Common Moorhen 4
American Coot 10
Killdeer 20
Black-necked Stilt 30
American Avocet 50
Spotted Sandpiper 1
Greater Yellowlegs 2
Long-billed Curlew 5
Least Sandpiper 120
Stilt Sandpiper 40
Long-billed Dowitcher 200
Caspian Tern 1
Mourning Dove 20
Common Ground-Dove 6
Eastern Phoebe 1
Couch's Kingbird 1
Horned Lark 1
Tree Swallow 20
Cave Swallow 5
Marsh Wren 1
Northern Mockingbird 2
American Pipit 150
Orange-crowned Warbler 2
Common Yellowthroat 10
Savannah Sparrow 5
Lincoln's Sparrow 6
Red-winged Blackbird 10
Eastern Meadowlark 1
Great-tailed Grackle 10

Sunday, November 25, 2007

Sal del Rey, 11/25/07

I headed up to Sal del Rey this cold, blustery morning. After a wet summer, the rainless fall has pretty much dried things up. Water evaporating from already hypersaline Sal del Rey is causing a salt precipitate to form along the shores and coating anything in the water.

Image and video hosting by TinyPic

There were not to many shorebirds and they were concentrated in the southwest corner. I was happy to see 15 Snowy plovers after missing them on my last visit.

Image and video hosting by TinyPic

Long-billed Dowitchers are supposed to prefer freshwater while we often find Short-bills in salt water along the coast. I tried to turn this into a Short-billed Dowitcher, but I thing it's just a salt loving Long-billed.

Image and video hosting by TinyPic

I was sad to see this dying Sand-hill Crane. I'm sure it won't go to waste as there are plenty of coyotes around.

Image and video hosting by TinyPic

Snow Goose 50
Great Blue Heron 1
Black Vulture 8
Turkey Vulture 10
Northern Harrier 1
Cooper's Hawk 1
Harris's Hawk 3
White-tailed Hawk 1
Red-tailed Hawk 1
Crested Caracara 4
Sandhill Crane 1
Snowy Plover 15
Killdeer 8
American Avocet 1
Greater Yellowlegs 4
Lesser Yellowlegs 20
Sanderling 10
Western Sandpiper 10
Least Sandpiper 175
Stilt Sandpiper 8
Long-billed Dowitcher 2
Eastern Phoebe 1
Great Kiskadee 2
Green Jay 3
Cactus Wren 1
Bewick's Wren 1
House Wren 2
Ruby-crowned Kinglet 1
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher 4
Northern Mockingbird 5
American Pipit 10
Orange-crowned Warbler 2
Eastern Meadowlark 1

Saturday, November 17, 2007

Frontera Audbon Thicket, 11/17/07

This morning Mary Gustafson found a Winter Wren along the trail on the south side of the pond at Frontera Audubon Thicket in Weslaco. As I was already leaving I didn't have much time to look for it. Best bird I had was a Clay-colored Robin along the south fence and a female Painted Bunting along the boardwalk. There were a pair of Green Kingfishers in the narrow pool west of the pond and a pair (same?) along the east ditch. A Yellow-throated Warbler was at the water feature behind the visitor's center. Overall migrant and wintering passerines are still low in numbers.

Image and video hosting by TinyPic

Image and video hosting by TinyPic

I though this Soldier looked cool sitting on the reed.

Image and video hosting by TinyPic

Plain Chachalaca 25
Cooper's Hawk 1
Inca Dove 10
White-tipped Dove 8
Buff-bellied Hummingbird 2
Green Kingfisher 4
Golden-fronted Woodpecker 8
Great Kiskadee 5
White-eyed Vireo 2
Blue-headed Vireo 1
Black-crested Titmouse 1
Carolina Wren 2
House Wren 3
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher 3
Clay-colored Robin 1
Northern Mockingbird 6
Long-billed Thrasher 3
Curve-billed Thrasher 2
Orange-crowned Warbler 3
Yellow-throated Warbler 1
Black-and-white Warbler 1
Northern Waterthrush 1
Common Yellowthroat 1
Wilson's Warbler 3
Lincoln's Sparrow 1
Northern Cardinal 4
Painted Bunting 1
Bronzed Cowbird 1
House Sparrow 3

Saturday, October 27, 2007

Anzalduas County Park, 10/27/07

I thought I would try something different this morning and headed over to Anzalduas County Park south of Mission. We finally had a cold front make it down and blow out the hummidity. The morning was crisp and clear and beautiful. And I had the place to myself. Almost. Except for a couple of hundred sceaming teenagers at a high school cross county meet. As the runners made their way around the roads in the park, the kids and coaches would go running through the trees and up over the levee to get better viewing points and to yell out encouragement. It was chaotic to say the least. Surprisingly it didn't hurt the birding too much. Nothing great. Just the usual good Anzalduas birds like Northern Beardless Tyrannult and Gray Hawk.

Image and video hosting by TinyPic

Image and video hosting by TinyPic

There were a few passerine migrants like this Blue-gray Gnatcatcher and Black-and-white Warbler.

Image and video hosting by TinyPic

Image and video hosting by TinyPic

This Mexican Bluewing is kind of dull with his wings closed.

Image and video hosting by TinyPic

But spectacular when he wants to show off.

Image and video hosting by TinyPic

Gadwall 1
Mottled Duck 2
Blue-winged Teal 6
Pied-billed Grebe 1
Double-crested Cormorant 16
Anhinga 1
Great Egret 2
Snowy Egret 1
Turkey Vulture 5
Cooper's Hawk 1
Gray Hawk 1
American Kestrel 2
American Coot 30
Spotted Sandpiper 4
Least Sandpiper 30
Rock Pigeon 15
Eurasian Collared-Dove 1
Mourning Dove 3
Inca Dove 2
Ringed Kingfisher 1
Golden-fronted Woodpecker 8
Ladder-backed Woodpecker 6
Northern Beardless-Tyrannulet 1
Eastern Phoebe 1
Vermilion Flycatcher 2
Great Kiskadee 10
Couch's Kingbird 10
Scissor-tailed Flycatcher 10
Loggerhead Shrike 1
White-eyed Vireo 1
Blue-headed Vireo 1
Green Jay 15
Bank Swallow 1
Cave Swallow 5
Barn Swallow 50
Black-crested Titmouse 6
House Wren 2
Ruby-crowned Kinglet 4
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher 6
Northern Mockingbird 4
European Starling 5
Orange-crowned Warbler 5
Nashville Warbler 2
Black-throated Green Warbler 1
Yellow-throated Warbler 1
Black-and-white Warbler 3
Common Yellowthroat 7
Summer Tanager 1
Northern Cardinal 2
Indigo Bunting 1
Eastern Meadowlark 5
Great-tailed Grackle 5
Lesser Goldfinch 1

Saturday, October 20, 2007

Frontera Audubon Thicket, 10/20/07

It was a delightful morning at Frontera Audubon Thicket in Weslaco. Warblers are still low in numbers. We're waiting on our first cold front of the fall season which is supposed to blow into town on Monday. Best bird was this young male Vermillion Flycatcher. I think it's a first for the park. I need to update the park list. It's somewhere around 190 species. A flyover Northern Harrier was unusual also. Fifteen Scissor-tailed Flycatches were headed south.

Image and video hosting by TinyPic

Here's a Pale-banded Crescent (I think).

Image and video hosting by TinyPic

Plain Chachalaca 22
Northern Harrier 1
Killdeer 1
Rock Pigeon 3
White-winged Dove 50
Mourning Dove 2
Inca Dove 15
White-tipped Dove 8
Buff-bellied Hummingbird 4
Golden-fronted Woodpecker 8
Ladder-backed Woodpecker 2
Vermilion Flycatcher 1
Couch's Kingbird 4
Eastern Kingbird 3
Scissor-tailed Flycatcher 15
White-eyed Vireo 5
Blue-headed Vireo 1
Northern Rough-winged Swallow 1
Barn Swallow 85
Black-crested Titmouse 2
Carolina Wren 1
House Wren 4
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher 2
Clay-colored Robin 1
Northern Mockingbird 6
Long-billed Thrasher 2
Curve-billed Thrasher 3
European Starling 1
Blue-winged Warbler 1
Orange-crowned Warbler 1
Nashville Warbler 3
Black-and-white Warbler 2
American Redstart 1
Common Yellowthroat 2
Wilson's Warbler 3
Lincoln's Sparrow 1
Northern Cardinal 3
Indigo Bunting 1
Red-winged Blackbird 150
Great-tailed Grackle 25
Brown-headed Cowbird 5
House Sparrow 3

Saturday, October 13, 2007

Frontera Audubon Thicket, 10/13/07

Birding has been pretty boring in the Rio Grande Valley the past few weeks so it's been a while since the blog has been updated. We're still waiting on our first cool front of the fall. A little dry air drifted in from the west bringing the morning low down to the upper 60's. Coolest it's been since spring. Warblers have been low in numbers compared to the past few fall seasons. Best bird today was this Clay-colored Robin. They tend to spend more time at the neighbor's place to the south.

Image and video hosting by TinyPic

Here's a couple of bugs.

Image and video hosting by TinyPic

Image and video hosting by TinyPic

Plain Chachalaca 12
Cooper's Hawk 1
White-winged Dove 115
Inca Dove 10
White-tipped Dove 5
Green Parakeet 21
Red-crowned Parrot 5
Chimney Swift 10
Buff-bellied Hummingbird 4
Ruby-throated Hummingbird 1
Green Kingfisher 1
Golden-fronted Woodpecker 6
Great Kiskadee 4
Couch's Kingbird 4
White-eyed Vireo 7
Green Jay 3
Northern Rough-winged Swallow 10
Cave Swallow 1
Barn Swallow 15
Black-crested Titmouse 2
Carolina Wren 2
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher 3
Clay-colored Robin 1
Northern Mockingbird 10
Long-billed Thrasher 2
Curve-billed Thrasher 3
Orange-crowned Warbler 2
Nashville Warbler 2
Yellow-throated Warbler 1
Ovenbird 2
Wilson's Warbler 2
Olive Sparrow 2
Northern Cardinal 1
Indigo Bunting 1
Red-winged Blackbird 50
Great-tailed Grackle 7
Brown-headed Cowbird 10
Lesser Goldfinch 2
House Sparrow 5