Southeast Arizona Adventure Part 2 - A Stop at Franklin Mountains State Park
© 2024 Alamo Birding Services LLC
By Mary Beth Stowe
Was wide awake around 4:00, so decided to do the morning routine and get going. Decided that two packets of oatmeal for breakfast were too much… βΉ
Was a little nervous about driving in the pitch, so didn’t take it any faster than 65 I think, but once it started getting lighter I felt better about going the speed limit. I forget where the first stop was (maybe Fort Stockton), but topped off there (I thought over three bucks a gallon at the time was pretty steep – little did I know…), then got a breakfast sandwich at Wendy’s at the next stop, only they gave me a chicken/bacon thing instead of the sausage/egg/cheese thing! (I probably should have taken it back, but the adventuresome side of me decided to try the thing; will stick with the sausage/egg/cheese thing… L) Maybe that was Van Horn – it was, because I was trying to enter an eBird report of the stuff on the way, and amazingly both ravens were flaggable! (We saw three small ravens in the desert scrub just before getting there…) Just looked at the range map – they oughta be there!
Anyway, topped off again just before El Paso, and took the bypass as I realized we would have plenty of time for a 15 minute vigil at the Franklin Mountains SP blind! It was a lovely day, and the temps were just perfect (oh, forgot that we drove through some major rainstorms on the way)! They have a new visitor’s center that you have to go into to check in, and on the way I rescued this pretty yellow and black caterpillar that the rangerette said was a White-lined Sphinx!ο»Ώ

Entrance Sign

White-lined Sphinx caterpillar
Drove right by the blind at first, so cruised back down and found the nature trail (seeing as that’s where it was last time I was there), and all that building they were doing last time was now finished – they had put in a covered picnic area! The blind was great, although I didn’t need my tripod: not only was there no room for it, but you were close enough to the ledge that you could use that for a stabilizer! White-winged Doves monopolized the place, and a few House Finches managed to get in. Two Rufous Hummers were fighting, and I was hearing both Scaled and Gambel’s Quail (the former made a quick cameo appearance at the water feature). The token mammal was a Rock Squirrel that actually gave a good video performance, sitting up and looking all around before skedaddling… A human family came by and I invited them to come on in, but I guess they didn’t feel comfortable: it was a small enclosure and there were two small kids with them, but they were very nice at any rate. Shortly after they left, what should show up right over the ledge but the big fat male Gambel’s Quail! I started filming and that’s when the timer went off βΉ; the Lord seemed to say, “Keep filming; you can take the audio out later!” πThat was the highlight of the day (and it was also cool that his wife came in, along with a White-winged Dove for size comparison)! Picked up a few butters for the trip as well; most everything was on the move, but a Sleepy Orange did settle down for a quick pic…





Gambel's Quail

Young male Rufous Hummingbird
Headed on after that (after going back up to the picnic area to use the restroom – oh, Canyon Towhee was singing in the parking lot, so that was a nice day bird), and it wasn’t too far to Lordsburg where we headed north into new territory – it was typical New Mexican yucca habitat, but so green! I expected a Pronghorn to show up at any minute! There was no gas station at the next 100-mile stop, so I used the opportunity to stop at a big pullout out in the middle of noplace, but that also allowed me to film this wonderful monsoon over the nearby mountain (with Black-throated Sparrow backup π)!

Twin monsoons!
I had programmed this regional park where the over-summering geese were hanging out into Siri, so she got us going towards Safford, but it was weird in that the compass was telling us we were going southwest, not northwest! (In looking at the Google route map, I now see where that little southwest leg was…) At any rate, we got here fine, and I’m glad Birdseye has that ability to get directions to a location, as we zigged and zagged all over the place to get there! Then we drove all over the park before we finally found a fishing access (actually, Siri told me to turn left once I got into the park, but I didn’t listen…). Parked at the restroom and dragged myself up the ramp, and there were the two geese, hanging out with the domestics! They were pretty beat-up, too, so I assume they just were too worn out to make the trip north when it was time. Also picked up Neotropic Cormorant for the trip (funny how they’re not the rarity here now that they used to be), and filmed another monster monsoon clobbering Mt. Graham!

The two wayward geese (Greater White-fronted and Canada)

Monster monsoon on Mt. Graham!
Got gassed up, got enough KFC to last most of the week (I have a cooler in the car, in case you’re wondering π), then wheeled into the Best Western, only to discover I was at the wrong one! I didn’t realize there were two, and my reservation was at the swankier one (and I even told the gal at the front desk how nice the room smelled)!









