Sunday, April 27, 2008

A Very Good Day!

We had a very good day's outing yesterday: Good company, mild weather, excellent birding, beautiful landscapes and no mosquitoes. What more could you ask for?

Sheldon Reservoir
We started by meeting up with Carlos and Macarena Aguilar on a cool, gray morning at Sheldon Lake/Reservoir. The Carpenter's Bayou end of the lake had some nesting activity (mainly Great Egrets, Night Herons, Anhingas, White Ibis) and a nice variety of the larger wading birds. Snags in the bayou were occupied by Great Blue Herons, Anhingas and Black-bellied Whistling Ducks, while Barn Swallows swooped around the Garrett Road bridge and a large flock of Neotropic Cormorants flew in and settled on the lake. Meanwhile Common Moorhens and a young Little Blue Heron meandered among the waterlily pads.


Carlos' Photo of a Young Little Blue Heron

The fishing jetty on Fauna Road had more Whistling Ducks, plus a Red-tailed Hawk, Red-bellied Woodpeckers, Red-winged Blackbirds, Great Egrets and Cedar Waxwings.

The ponds at the Environmental Center had a couple of alligators as well as a nice group of herons' and egrets' nests.


Anole at the Environmental Center



Waterlilies were much in evidence.




Baytown Nature Center

At noon we drove over to the Baytown Nature Center and had a picnic lunch in the butterfly garden. It was now warm and sunny, and lunchtime entertainment was provided by a Common Loon and several terns.

Carlos and Macarena

Then we walked the peninsula trail, stopping frequently to admire the flowers, butterflies and birds that lined the pathway. Brown Pelicans patrolled the channel, while Ospreys and Laughing Gulls circled overhead. Ponds by the trail were busy with Great and Tricolored Egrets, Tricolored Herons, Blue-winged Teal, Mottled Duck, Killdeer, Willets, Black-necked Stilts, Lesser Yellowlegs and Roseate Spoonbills.



Black-bellied Whistling Ducks

White Ibis

Great Egret

Yellow-crowned Night Heron

Tricolored Heron


Killdeer

Lesser Yellowlegs

We were all struck by how beautifully nature has managed to reclaim this housing subdivision, abandoned 20+ years ago because of hurricane damage. Flowers are everywhere and they attract lots of butterflies, bees and other insects.


Indian Blanket





Sulphur Butterfly



Birding Total

For a relaxed few hours of birding, we saw a very good range of species: 28 at Sheldon, 30 at Baytown and 45 overall. My year list moved to 160 with the addition of Common Loon, Yellow-crowned Night Heron and Marbled Godwit.

2 comments:

Dorothy Borders said...

Absolutely gorgeous pictures. What a great birding day you had in a place I did not even know about. But now I am anxious to pay it a visit.

Jeff said...

Next month should be perfect at Sheldon, which I believe is the biggest inland rookery in the USA. It is also excellent for ducks in the winter. Baytown is a logical twin site for a good birding morning or day, because it's only 20 minutes away from Sheldon.