Yesterday Michelle David was birding at Oliveira Park in Brownsville, famous for its roosting parrots, when she found a warbler that initially struck her as a female Blackburnian Warbler. Well it should have as it was basically a gray and white warbler with a yellow throat and breast, black streaking on the sides and a dark crown. It lacked the black mask of a Yellow-throated Warbler. But the yellow extended up over the eyes causing her to realize this was something different. She got photos and quickly sent them to Justin LeClaire who quickly recognized the bird as a Grace's Warbler, a first record for the RGV.
Grace's Warblers breed in pine forests of the SW United States and winter in similar habitat in Mexico. I've seen many in Arizona and west Texas and have often thought they could get lost in migration and show up in the Valley. But I was sitting comfortably on the couch, watching football, and didn't want to make the long drive on what was proving to be a very hot day. So I stayed home with plans to get an early start in the morning.
There was about ten of us looking this morning and it took over two hours before it was pulled out of the salt cedars along the jogging trail. Good photos were hard to get on this windy morning and I'm thankful to get a few recognizable images.
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