I woke up a
little after 8 to a foggy 68° day, in Liberty, Texas! I went online & registered for the Laredo Birding Festival,
getting the last spot on a couple of the field trips, because I was registering
so late. I had flown to Houston, visited
my daughter, and ‘bought back’ her 2000 Subaru Outback, now that she’s bought
herself an F-150 – a girl’s gotta have a ‘truck”. I left the motel and headed down the road to
the south, intending to drive the Subaru back to the Pacific Northwest.
I stopped at the Visitors’ Center for the Anahuac National Wildlife Refuges - now called the “Texas Chenier Plain NWR Complex Headquarters”.
The center was closed today, but the trails were open, and I walked from
the Loblolly Pine forest down to the bald cypress forest at the edge of the
lake.I stopped at the Visitors’ Center for the Anahuac National Wildlife Refuges - now called the “Texas Chenier Plain NWR Complex Headquarters”.
Bald Cypress - Taxodium distichum |
has obviously been used for centuries, as the shell middens all along the trail attest
Native Americans had clam feeds here for many generations . . . |
Cypress 'knees' above the swamp water |
Roseau Cane - Phragmites australis |
Trachemys scripta |
The blind was clean enough, but the only feeder present was empty and the water structure just had rain water in it.
It seemed to be a slow morning for birds, but I did see 16 species there, even though it was so foggy that you couldn’t see out into the lake. A handsome Hermit Thrush kept mostly out of sight in the brush, and a few Orange-crowned Warblers. It amuses me that I’ve seen the Orange-crowned in Texas before I found one in January in western Washington!
There is a lot of Chinese Privet in this part of the country, but I’ve never seen any local birds or animals feeding on the berries
Chinese privet berries - Ligustrum sinense |
Jeremiah was a bullfrog . . . |
Green Anole - Anolis carolinensis |
I drove the loop, seeing 40 species, including 9 species that were new for the year. One was the Neotropic Cormorant, which is a little slighter build than the Double-crested Corms that I’m used to seeing, and takes me a while to separate.
The impoundment is pretty full, with ‘islands’ of Roseau cane.
Besides the
birds, one has to keep an eye out for alligators on this coast.
Big ones have a toothy grin, but the little
ones are ‘cute’,although even the little ones can be dangerous – if you’re a gallinule!
I walked out on the short boardwalk, and found a large flock of whistling-ducks.
The Black-bellied Whistling-duck has a gray face, a bright pink bill, and – of all things – a black belly.
The Fulvous Whistling-duck has a gray bill, cinnamon face, breast and belly, with white streaks on its flanks. The eBird program flagged the 54 Fulvous that were mixed in with the Black-bellys as a “high count”.
Fulvous Whistling-ducks on the left, a Black-bellied on the right |
On the drive out, there was a White-tailed Kite. The books used to call these “Black-shouldered” Kites, which I always thought was a more apt name.
Kite in the Fog |
The fog was pretty thick on the crossing, so all of the birds seen were close to the boat.
Four of us in in a row were “randomly selected” from the ferry line for inspection by “Security” staff. Looking in my glove box? And under my car’s hood? Really? I find it so damned demeaning to be searched or have my vehicle searched in the guise of “Homeland Insecurity”. Back west, we don’t have to put up with this un-American intrusion on our Washington State Ferry system, but apparently the Texans are more afraid of their own citizens . . . end of rant.
I drove on until I made it to Lake Jackson –
Clute, and checked into the La Quinta Inn.
Texas
Chenier Plain NWR eBird Checklist is Here
Anahuac NWR
eBird Checklist is Here
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