Day
3
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"Unit 1" |
The Salton Sea. I had questioned whether I
had enough time to get here, and if instead I should have stayed near the coast
birding sites more thoroughly in the limited time I had. One look at the sheer
numbers and I could not stay away. I started at first light at the very
southern end of the lake, called “Unit 1” of the Sonny Bono Salton Sea NWR,
arriving just after a guided tour group. The fields at the end of the track
held thousands of Geese – mainly Snow
Geese but also good numbers of the more diminutive Ross’s Geese. An incredible sight and sound, with constant new
arrivals and departures, all honking away. You could happily get out and take
photos, but interestingly birds close to the road were flushed by moving cars.
Some shallow pools further towards the observation decks held hundreds of Shoveler, Black-necked Stilt and other waders. A small group of Sandhill Crane were also feeding near
here. At the end of the track I left the car and viewed some of the pools from
a slightly higher elevation. To the north a distant large bund was covered in
hirundines – mostly Tree Swallow but
with some Barn Swallow as well. A Peregrine perched on a pylon, and there
were at least four Northern Harriers
hunting. In the shallows many waders fed, and if I had thought that one of the
earlier pools had had a lot of Shoveler,
that had been a fraction of the numbers I could now see, along with thousands
of Green-winged Teal. The bird of
the morning however went to an American
Bittern in plain sight on one of the levees, which a short while later
treated me to a flyby. I could not believe I had nearly omitted this area from
my itinerary!
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There are both Snow and Ross's Goose in this photo |
|
American Bittern |
I made a brief stop at a Ramer Lake, just
north of Rockwood. This was slightly out of my way, but not hugely so and it
was one of the only places I could expect to get Clark’s Grebe. I found a view point on the eastern side and scoped
from a small pontoon. Seven Clark’s
Grebe were seen, along with a Black-necked
Grebe, two Pied-billed Grebe,
and several Ruddy Duck. The most
numerous birds were Ring-billed Gulls,
Double-crested Cormorants and White Pelicans. Just to the north of
this site along Kershaw Road was a large cattle lot and this held many hundreds
of Brewer’s Blackbirds and Grackles.
I then drove along Highway 111 to the Union
Tract Visitor Centre. There were more Snow
Geese here, although it is a bit of a walk out to the lake shore. I was
already behind schedule so I birded around the visitor centre. Highlights here
were two nesting Burrowing Owls in
pipes by the entrance gate, a Greater
Roadrunner, and around the feeder scrub Abert’s Towhee, Common
Ground Dove, and both Blue-grey
and Black-tailed Gnatcatchers. In
the fields alongside the road were several hundred Cattle Egret, and a flock of Western
Meadowlark.
|
Loggerhead Shrike |
By now it was mid-morning and being me, I
was already slightly nervous about my flight out of LAX which left in ten hours
time! I needed to make tracks, and carrying on north drove up to the Salton Sea
SRA HQ. This is also on the east side of the lake but almost near the very top.
The main birding area here is the small harbour and the surrounding bushes. In
the harbour itself were several hundred Blue-winged
Teal, a Spotted Sandpiper on the
margins, and the vagrant female Garganey
was easily found near the old pier. I had known about this bird for some time,
and as I always like to pick up a few ABA code 4 birds on any trip I go on it
was another tick in the box for including the Salton Sea after all. I walked
out to the edge of the lake to see a vast number of Bonaparte’s Gull. Thousands, uncountable numbers. The flock
stretched hundreds of metres north and south, and somewhere within it were a
few Black-headed Gulls. I gave it
about half an hour before I lost the will to live and went back to proper
birding. Also out on the water were several Surf Scoter, Goldeneye, Ruddy Duck, American Wigeon and Pintail,
along with hundreds of Redhead and Shoveler.
|
Garganey - Mega |
|
Verdin |
|
Savannah Sparrow |
There were lots and lots of waders on the
shoreline - Dunlin, Grey Plover, American Avocet, Black-necked
Stilt, Killdeer, Semipalmated Plover, Western Sandpiper and Willet. In the bushes south of the
harbour I tracked down Phainopepla, Northern Mockingbird, Verdin, Black Phoebe and Black-tailed
Gnatcatcher along a small path away from the campground.
My trip was nearly over and I was still
missing a southern California speciality - Costa’s
Hummingbird. I had read about a zoo near Palm Springs that had lovely
gardens, the Living Desert Zoo and Gardens, and as this was more or less
directly on my route to the airport I stopped in. The car park was heaving at
1pm, and seeing the throngs of people convinced me I did not want to be here.
Luckily there were quite a few Costa’s
Hummingbirds in the landscaped bits around the car park, so my advice to
birders is either go early or just stick to the outside. I walked a circuit to
see what else I could find and picked up Phainopepla,
Verdin, Ladder-backed Woodpecker, Greater
Roadrunner and Say’s Phoebe.
Some small trees between parking bays held many Yellow-rumped Warbler and House
Finch.
|
Costa's Hummingbird |
I had one final stop in mind which I felt I
had time for even with the legendary Los Angeles evening traffic. This was the
San Jactino Wildlife Area centred around Mystic Lake. This turned out to be
superb area and I spent close to two hours here driving around the mostly empty
tracks. Lots of waders and wildfowl on pools very close to the road, and also
many raptors including Bald Eagle
and Northern Harrier. I saw over 50
species and the full eBird checklist is here.
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Say's Phoebe |
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Red-winged Blackbird |
|
Black-winged Stilt |
At 4pm I called time and headed for Los
Angeles which I made with plenty of time to spare. It had a been a frenetic
trip with just over 150 species seen in two and a half days, including a small
number of new ABA species and indeed world lifers. Had I had an extra day I
would likely have spent it on the coast between Los Angeles and San Diego, and
there were a number of sites in San Diego itself which I never got to. Can’t
wait for the next one!
I really enjoyed this trip report. As someone who struggles to motivate himself to drive anywhere more than an hour away, I'm alwaya amazed by your energy and dedication. I can't imagine flying all that way and cramming in all that birding in two and a half days. Do you have any idea what your world list is now?
ReplyDeleteMalcolm
Thanks Malcom - currently stalled on around 1950. Not that many in the grand scheme of things, and 2020 is not looking like the year to make great strides really!! As for energy and dedication, imagine when this lockdown is over - I might go mad!
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