Day 2: Kerr WMA with Barbara Pankratz
© 2024 Alamo Birding Services LLC
By Mary Beth Stowe
I felt like a kid on Christmas morning the next day, so I did the morning routine unhurriedly because I got up uber early, and got over to Bobcat Meadows well before dawn; the wind concerned me, but there were no night birds at all, and as the sky lightened we had the usual suspects, including the song-battling Black-capped Vireos. I rushed out of there in time to meet Barbara at the main gate, which was closed when I first checked, but open now! We had a great reunion, and she had quite the list while she was waiting for me (she, too, felt like a kid on Christmas morning and got there around seven, when the gate was open)! I had heard a chickadee coming in, and Inca Doves at the station, but for some reason she didn’t hear the Canyon Wren I heard (but she got it later).
We piled into Heppy and started crawling, and it was good to catch up during the course of the day! It all blended together since we covered both roads; Barbara spotted Lark Sparrows right away on the main road, a Vermilion Flycatcher “butterflied” overhead, and a Swainson’s Hawk circled in the distance. We heard both the Goldencheeks and the Blackcaps right away, but the former was the only one to cooperate by sitting on the tippy top of a tree! (Barbara circled around a tree a Blackcap was singing in to try and “herd” him my way…) We found another Goldencheek pair chasing each other, and Barbara got terrific shots with her new Sony, but I really had a hard time getting mine on the bird and then in focus, so that made me decide to get a Powershot video first, and then drag out The Monster if the bird was still being cooperative! At that same spot we had a thooking Hermit Thrush, and we actually did have a lot of Blackcaps, but they would only allow fleeting glimpses as they shot from tree to tree.

The main drag

Golden-cheeked Warblers (male left, female center & right)

Barbara takes a picture of the interpretive signs
But one of the best shots of the day was a tom Turkey in full breeding display! He actually stayed put for video taken with both The Monster and the Powershot on the tripod, because the wind was really shaking The Monster, and it was worth getting a seamless video of that show! One of the residences had a drip or something that was attracting birds, but most were too far away for me to tell what they were, much less get video! But here we added Summer Tanager, and White-crowned, Chipping, and Lincoln’s Sparrows to the list (I was especially happy with the Whiteys 😊), plus a pair of Golden-fronted Woodpeckers that looked so huge to Barbara that she thought they were Flickers at first (I woulda taken that 😊)! Barbara thought she had a Clay-colored, and a random video I took and reviewed later showed that indeed she did have one!


Tom Turkey in full display mode
At another spot, a White-eyed Vireo miraculously came into view for a brief video, and we actually did hit the Vireo Bonanza with at least heard-only Yellow-throated, Hutton’s, and Bell’s (barely heard the latter)! Somewhere in here a Goldencheek popped up right next to the car, and when I finally got on him he let me take wonderful video of him singing! On the way out I heard a Rufous-crowned Sparrow, so I stopped so Barbara could add that to her list. At another stop a couple of Great Blue Herons flew by in the distance! Ash-throated Flycatchers were calling all over, but never came out, while Blue-gray Gnatcatchers and Black-crested Titmice were out the yin yang, along with Field Sparrows (by ear, anyway)! Ravens provided background music here and there, while Purple Martins glided past periodically. At another stop Barbara spotted a Nashville Warbler, and an Orange-crowned Warbler sang somewhere (I think she actually saw it). Once again Barbara’s plant knowledge was indispensable, as she pointed out the Redbud Tree to me, and explained that the Live Oaks do shed their leaves, but not all at once, which is why you see a combination of green and golden leaves on them.

End of the road

White-eyed Vireo (left) & Blue-gray Gnatcatcher (right)

Yet another Golden-cheeked Warbler

Redbud Tree
Barbara had never been to the Bobcat Meadows area before, so we swung over there after finishing up the main road. We had pretty much the same players as yesterday, including the song-battling Blackcaps (Barbara thought she could have had a pair). The towhees actually showed themselves here, but I don’t recall anything that actually let me shoot them.
Barbara had to get back to Comfort for a get-together with some former teacher friends, so I dropped her off at her car and hugged goodbye, after which I gave the main drag one last crawl (seeing as it would be closed tomorrow for a Turkey hunt). It was really quieting down, and Barbara thought that was due to the drought; she had pointed out how some of the oak trees were stressed because of it. A pair of Black Vultures stayed put for Monster video, and a Hutton’s Vireo actually sat out in the open, singing away! He even stayed put long enough for me to get Monster video of him! 😊 Spotted a small kettle that included a buteo-type thing in with the vultures, and at first glance I thought it was a Harris’ Hawk due to the white tail base (and I knew they didn’t occur up here so I jumped out and took a bunch of pictures), but after analyzing said pictures, I couldn’t figure out what it was! The color and pattern actually matched Golden Eagle, but it was way too small for that, so pondered sending Bill Clark a photo, only when I got to the hotel and looked at the pictures on the computer, by golly it was a Harris’, and a pretty beat-up one to boot (you could just make out his white tail tip)! So I processed those and got them up on eBird, as it was a flagged sighting (and I mused that the strong south winds probably blew the poor thing up – when you think about it, they really don’t occur that far south of there)!

Harris’ Hawk, a vagrant in the Hill Country!
It was time for me to head back by the time I hit the end of the road, so we headed back, stopping to film a pair of cooperative Barn Swallows by the headquarters building. Got gassed and iced up, and headed to the Church’s to get lunch for the rest of the week, only ran into this place called Chicken Express on the way, so I thought I’d try that! Got home in plenty of time to shower and catch up on e-mail!

Barn Swallows









