
Vesper Sparrow

Savannah Sparrow
Pyrrhuloxia

Black Vulture
Jeff Mohamed blogs about birds and other wildlife in the Houston area - and occasionally farther afield.
Vesper Sparrow
Savannah Sparrow
Pyrrhuloxia
Black Vulture
Pyrrhuloxia
The site also had several sparrow species, including Field Sparrow (US life bird #396 for me), White-crowned, Vesper, Song and Lincoln's.
Field Sparrow
White-crowned Sparrow
Immature White-crowned Sparrow
Vesper Sparrow
The busiest and perhaps the prettiest bird was this Blue-gray Gnatcatcher.
American Robin
It was very misty at first, muffling the sound of hundreds of Snow Geese in the fields and occasionally passing overhead in V-shaped flocks. There were also flyovers by flocks of Canada Geese and groups of White Ibis. A Bald Eagle and a Great Blue Heron were just visible on the ground through the mist.
I spent some time trying to get photos of some of the Red-tailed Hawks and American Kestrels on the roadside wires, but they would move on as soon as I stopped the car opposite them. All in all I saw maybe ten Red-tailed, varying from a dark morph right through to one with a pure white breast and a complete brown helmet. I saw about the same number of Kestrels, interpsersed on the phone lines with twice as many Loggerhead Shrikes and Northern Mockingbirds. The hedges had Savannah and Lincoln's Sparrows, as well as an Eastern Phoebe engaged in its morning grooming session.
A Distant Red-tailed Hawk
Further along, I stopped at a small bridge over Bear Creek. The latter had only a trickle of water but this was enough for morning baths for Chipping Sparrows and Red-winged Blackbirds. The water also attracted American Goldfinch, Carolina Chickadees and Northern Cardinals. I caught a brief glimpse of a different sparrow and managed to grab a quick photo: Harris Sparrow, a new life bird for me.
Further east, mourning doves and European Starlings lined the wires, while a pair of Northern Harriers buzzed a field on my left, followed by a pair of Crested Caracaras crossing the road just ahead of me. The trees at the road end had more Red-tailed Hawks and Eastern Phoebes, and a single Yellow-rumped Warbler.
Judging by the condition of its wings, the specimen in our yard probably got swept up to Houston by a recent storm front.
White-winged Doves on one of our feeders
Mourning, Inca, Eurasian Collared & White-winged Doves
European Starling
House & Chipping Sparrows
Blue Jay
Tufted Titmouse
Carolina Chickadee
Carolina Wren
American Robin
Northern Cardinal
Northern Mockingbird
Cedar Waxwing
Yellow-rumped Warbler
American Goldfinch
Common Grackle
Red-winged Blackbird
Red-bellied & Downy Woodpeckers
Downy Woodpecker on our Fence
Yellow-bellied Sapsucker
Ruby-throated Hummingbird
Ruby-crowned Kinglet.
Flyovers include Turkey Vulture, Black Vulture, Cooper's Hawk, American Crow and Great Egret.