Southeast Arizona Adventure Part 1 - South Llano River State Park
© 2024 Alamo Birding Services LLC
By Mary Beth Stowe
Woke up earlier than anticipated, which meant I got going earlier than anticipated! Was kinda cool that the first bird of the trip was our purring Lesser Nighthawks, and since the “game” allows anything logged while packing the car, was able to add some nice Valley birds to the list, like Couch’s Kingbird and Green Parakeet!
It was a beautiful, sunny day, and a thankfully uneventful drive up to Alice, our first potty stop. On the way there picked up TV, Caracara (another non-Arizona bird), Scissor-tailed Flycatcher (ditto), and a couple of other widespread things (couldn’t get good looks at any of the hawks).
Second stop was the Subway at Pleasanton, continuing up the “back way” and avoiding San Antonio. My typed directions actually got us a little lost, so Siri got us to the Subway, and from there, by programming in the next town along SR173 (which happened to be Kyote), she got us back on our original route with no trouble! We picked up a Black Vulture along this stretch.
Kerrville was the next stop where we gassed up and picked up a Raven in town (assuming Common around here). It was a fairly quick drive to South Llano River, but we’d only have about 15 minutes to check the blind before having to head out again. Pulling in to the park was a scream: the river was full of revelers with their yellow innertubes! (They were all identical so I assumed they were park-issued…) When I got to the office my heart sank only in that it was packed with people in line (most with innertubes J), so I asked the ranger in the office if, since I had an annual pass and had to take off soon, I could just zip down to the blind. She very kindly took down my info so she could enter me in the system, and away we went! That was very generous of her! Added Lesser Goldfinch at their little outside fountain.

Entrance sign
It was in the high 90s when we pulled in the parking lot, so it was probably best that we weren’t gonna spend a lot of time there. I mounted the Powershot on the tripod, stuck a bottle of water in my back pocket and headed down, unsuccessfully trying to call out a fussing Bewick’s Wren. The blind was surprisingly active (it was about 2:20 by then), and (no surprise) the water feature was especially popular! Right away was able to get great video of a Yellow-breasted Chat, a female Painted Bunting, Cardinal, and Summer Tanager, lots of Field Sparrows, a lone Black-throated Sparrow, a young Black-crested Titmouse, and even a Golden-fronted Woodpecker and White-winged Dove that came in! Lark Sparrows had been singing and one showed up just as I was packing up. (Didn’t bother with the House Finches, and the Black-chinned Hummers were too quick…)

New Paragraph

A female Summer Tanager replaces the chat, while a Field Sparrow replaces the bunting!

Black-crested Titmouse
We headed back when the timer went off, picking up a buzzing Blue-gray Gnatcatcher, and continued our trek to Ozona (after taking an obligatory picture of the entrance sign J). I was a little concerned about the heat and the speed limit’s effect on the tires (80 mph and hovering around 100 degrees), but we made it fine, where we gassed and iced up, then checked in to the Quality Inn.









