Big Bend Part 3: Rio Grande Village & More Scouting
© 2024 Alamo Birding Services LLC
By Mary Beth Stowe
Got through with the morning routine a little early, so headed down to the campground parking area to see if any night birds were calling. The stars were just incredible (I stepped outside to listen, and you could actually see the Milky Way), but the first bird to call was actually a Scott’s Oriole! Eventually I did hear a distant Poorwill (one down, three to go) before it was time to head to Rio Grande Village, but on the way down I couldn’t believe it: a visible Poorwill was by the side of the road! At least I’m assuming that’s what it was at this point: both that and the Mexican Whippoorwill have white tail corners, but since I heard a Poorwill coming from that general direction, that would be more likely…
Rolled into Rio Grande Village right on time and missed the parking area for the Nature Trail, but that was okay as a Roadrunner was right outside the car (and yes, even though he was right there I couldn’t help messin’ with – i.e. cooing at - ‘im)! Once in the lot I got the camera set up on the tripod and headed for the trail!

Curious Roadrunner
The Yellow-breasted Chats were all over, and even though he was silhouetted, the first one I filmed I think will make a great “early morning” ambience clip! What I think was a Desert Cottontail was on the road, and the trail itself was lovely, with a metal boardwalk through the marsh, where I scared up a Green Heron. I got very excited about a large aquatic mammal on the other side of the pond but couldn’t get definitive video (or so I thought – sometimes getting the tripod to work properly was frustrating)! According to the range maps, Beaver would be the default, but as I later studied what video I was able to get, he did indeed have a skinny tail – the Nutria have arrived in Big Bend!

Yellow-breasted Chat - notice how puffy his throat gets when singing!

Nature Trail
The trail went through some reeds and then headed up some stairs after that; using the tripod as a walking stick was helpful, and once at the top, the view was spectacular! A Blue Grosbeak was singing across the way in lovely light, and a couple of Black-throated Sparrows showed up. What amused me were all the trinkets alongside the trail for sale, apparently by Mexican women (who weren’t there); it reminded me for all the world of the Tarahumara women we encountered on a Victor Emanuel Nature Tours trip selling their wares in Copper Canyon!

Trail at the top
No way was I gonna take that loop over the top of the hill, so I headed back down (shooting a Millipede on the way), where by that time the dragonflies were stealing the show! Definitely had Swift Setwing and Blue Dasher, and what was confirmed as Neon Skimmers by odonate expert Dennis Paulson! A Painted Bunting sang in the shadows, and near the trailhead one of the chats was right overhead! On the way back to the car one of the “wild” horses was feeding by the side of the road, then smoothly trotted off when I tried to get a second video! Cicadas had been calling all over and was actually able to film one (a little help from BugGuide narrowed it down to Cinctifera Scrub Cicada)! The only Empress Leilia of the trip posed on the road as well, and while reviewing the video I caught a Red Admiral making a cameo appearance in the Painted Bunting clip! Somewhere in there was a river access that had some Blue-fronted Dancers hanging out in the mud…

Male Swift Setwing

A true Muybridge Moment (his Horse in Motion film was made to prove that at some point in a horse’s gait, all four feet are off the ground)!

Cinctifera Scrub Cicada
From there just cruised down towards the Black Hawk area; I had been hearing Gray Hawks all morning (no worry about Green Jays mimicking their calls here), and finally bagged one in a tree! Summer Tanagers and more Painted Buntings were singing all over, but couldn’t spot the Black Hawk (and no self-respecting black anything would be out in that heat – except vultures and ravens)! So at the end of the road I hiked ten minutes of the Hot Springs Canyon Trail; actually ended up going straight on the flat path, as the “real” trail went up the hill, and they had all sorts of warning signs out about heat danger! Even so I got pretty wiped, but the trail looped around three ponds! Nothing much was in them, but got a cool banded grasshopper out of it (BugGuide confirmed it as a Pallid-winged, despite the video grab showing a yellow wing)! I was really surprised that the irrigated areas didn’t have more odes, but a Powdered Dancer at least posed for pics! But the best was yet to come: on the way out I noticed another hawk silhouetted against the sky, and it was the Common Black! Bingo!

Daniel's Ranch

Common Black Hawk (left) and Gray Hawk (right)
Headed over to Sam Nail Ranch after that, gassing up and getting ice and water (the lady behind the counter was on the phone and warning the people that it was supposed to get up to 115 in the Village!). It was a beautiful drive, and arrived at the place at the same time a couple of young families did! I beat them to the oasis (always takes families a bit of time), but got distracted by a Pyrrhuloxia singing in the shade halfway up the windmill (took me awhile to find him)! The oasis had a little bench as promised, but also a bunch of pesky flies and Pepsid Wasps, especially around the damp water hole! The families just passed through (a couple of young gals stayed for a few minutes and then went back the way they came), so I sat for about 15 minutes to see what would come in; a couple of Bell’s Vireos were song battling, and I finally got a brief video of one! Got video of what I assumed was a Black-tailed Gnatcatcher catching a gnat at the time, but reneged the next day when a Blue-gray was singing up a storm in there, and the video did indeed show it to be Blue-gray. Back at the car was a snazzy-looking Two-striped Mermiria grasshopper!

Sam Nail Ranch

Pyrrhuloxia singing in the shade of a dilapidated windmill!

Two-striped Mermiria on the car door
Headed back to Chisos Lodge with a stop at Lost Pine Trail – nothing there but a workout! Once back at the Basin I parked in the amphitheater lot and checked the butter action; an Orange Sulphur was new, as was a Gray Hairstreak, but I think the rest were old friends. Mama Cactus Wren was feeding her grown babies under the parked cars; I think she was getting bugs off the grills! Filmed a lady Ladder-backed Woodpecker that was so beat up she barely had a tail left, and a deer that I think was the local race of White-tailed (as the ears looked pretty small), but I didn’t get a good enough look at the tail to rule out Mule.

Lost Pine Trail (didn’t get far…)

Male Checkered White

Baby Cactus Wren (note the gape marks)
I was done after that, so decided to splurge and get room service; after getting extra washcloths and coffee, I ordered the salmon, and when it came, I ate outside as a monsoon started to form over the mountain! That was pretty neat!









