Southeast Arizona Adventure Part 4 - Pinery Canyon
© 2024 Alamo Birding Services LLC
By Mary Beth Stowe
Headed out to Pinery Canyon Road, and thankfully didn’t nail a Poorwill this time (didn’t even see one flush)! And for the first time I got confused and neglected to make the turn towards Chiricahua, but the good news is that the detour bagged us a Great Horned Owl that flew up on a post! Pinery Canyon Road seemed kinda slimy at first, so that got me feeling a little icky, but it turned out okay; at the first stop Botteri’s Sparrow and Common Nighthawk were new for the trip, but the “Lilian’s” Meadowlark call threw me; I thought it was a Lark Bunting at first!

Lower Pinery Canyon Road in the early dawn
The “rule” for these roads was thus: if we came to a dicey crossing that had deep running water, we’d turn around and do the backup, which today would have been Chiricahua National Monument. But when we came to what I recalled as the primary “dicey spot”, it was fine, so I thought we were home free! Right around there were the sycamores, and a couple of Sulphur-bellied Flycatchers sounded off (eBird didn’t like them because I had to use a Mt. Graham checklist as we had no signal…)! We got the normal foothill stuff going up (chupping Hepatic Tanager, lots of Spotted Towhees, etc.), and in the higher elevations picked up a new trip bird: a singing Greater Pewee! Western Wood Pewees were all over, a Plumbeous Vireo let me film him, and Cordilleran Flycatchers were in good numbers as well, calling and fighting with each other! (I did hear an Olive Warbler, but he was way over there…) At one stop I thought I was pulled over enough when this utility truck went screaming by (and he didn’t slow down much, either…)!

One of the “dicey crossings” where Pine Creek crosses the road

Black-headed Grosbeak & Plumbeous Vireo
When we got to Onion Saddle I saw the guy’s truck parked where I usually park, so we headed on up to Rustler Park. Again, the butter action was pretty dismal, even though there were lots of flowers in bloom. Actually, in general it was pretty quiet overall, but at the end of the road where I decided to have a bite to eat (and tried to entice a pair of Steller’s Jays with a bagel – didn’t work…), the highlight was a flock of Band-tailed Pigeons that were feeding on the berries of this long-leaved bush!

Rustler Park

Yellow-eyed Junco ; Immature and adult Band-tailed Pigeons
No chickadees ☹, so headed back down the entrance road where I pulled over to let a van through, and it was Jon Dunn leading a Wings tour!! That was a fun reunion! I gave him a report of what I had gotten so far, so they headed up to the park and I continued down the mountain, keeping an eye out for the reported Short-tailed Hawk, but couldn’t spot any raptors aside from TVs… But my “rule” was put to the test when we arrived at Turkey Creek and it was flowing pretty good! We rammed through anyway as there was lots of “high ground” and made it fine; in fact, we stopped to check for odes and picked up what ended up being Springwater and Tonto Dancers, thanks to help from the Arizona ode folks! While I was doing that a young kid wearing bins came over, and I asked him if he was looking for bugs, too! No, he was a birder, but he was checking the crossing, as he was driving a low clearance vehicle and he wasn’t sure if he could make it across! (Don’t know if he ever tried it…) All the water made for some great little waterfall video, though!

Coming down the other side of Onion Saddle

Tonto Dancer & Springwater Dancer
Around noon I forsook the “Breeding Bird Survey” (BBS) Protocol and just crawled down the road as it was getting hot (Heppy’s thermometer still said 58 or something ridiculous – I don’t think so!). I did make a brief stop at Sunny Flats Campground and hiked about ten minutes of the nature trail, where a couple of young Cooper’s Hawks were squealing (Goshawks had been reported here as well, so I wanted to be sure…). The Research Station was closed, but cruised down that road a little to find a place to camp out pre-dawn for Whiskered Screech Owl; decided on a trailhead parking area close to the station.

Cave Creek Nature Trail
But God made up for the missed chickadees in spades while crawling down South Fork Road: at some sycamores I heard some funny noises that almost reminded me of a weaker version of the Eared Quetzal’s whee-chup call, and the next thing I knew, a male Elegant Trogon blasted in! I got out and attempted to get video, and while he was very active he did give me some great video ops! Turns out that’s exactly where he had the nest everyone told me about later – no wonder he seemed agitated! Another couple drove up behind me (Dave and Anita from San Diego), and she was thrilled to see him (but I don’t think he was as cooperative for her – he led her on a merry chase down the road…)!

Cooperative Elegant Trogon (with food for the kids at right)
Headed straight to the new Jasper/Moisan feeders where a lady named Ronna was taking care of things; the light was awful (although the pictures turned out better than I expected), but the birds were great with Gambel’s Quail, Broad-billed Hummer, Hooded Oriole, Verdin, and Pyrrhuloxias all coming in! I heard an Anna’s Hummer, but then saw what looked a lot like Carolyn Ohl’s Costa’s Hummer in Alpine from earlier this summer – could that have been what was singing, and if so, did we have a hybrid on our hands?? I entered it as Costa’s, but then took it off later as we saw several young Anna’s at the various Huachuca feeders that looked just like it (and indeed, hummer expert Sheri Williamson confirmed it as an Anna’s, as some can look whiter below than our standard “dirty” Anna’s I remember from San Diego)! On the mammal side a little Harris’ Antelope Squirrel was just as cute as he could be!

Left: Verdin; Right: Anna’s Hummingbird with an unusually pale breast

Rock Squirrel & Harris’ Antelope Squirrel
After that headed to Bob Rodriguez’s feeders and enjoyed more quail, tons of House Finches, a Black-throated Sparrow, Curve-billed Thrasher, and a Blue Grosbeak (could have sworn a Varied Bunting shot through, but it looked rather big, so I wrote it off as a young Blue as I’ve seen people mistake them for Varieds). I had a start when I glanced at my phone and it said it was 4:10 (when my alarm was set to go off at 3:30), so I figured it thought I was in New Mexico…

Gambel’s Quail & Blue Grosbeak

View heading back into Portal
Stopped at the Portal Store to get water and ice, and ran into Jon’s group again; thankfully they did get the chickadees at Rustler, so it was good practice in “rejoicing with those who rejoice” (and knowing Jon, he probably worked his tail off to get it, too, and I’m just too laid back for that)! I was disappointed in that this time the streak was broken (I had at least heard them on every previous trip up Pinery Canyon), but as I said before, all the locals are saying that the dry weather is having an adverse effect on the birds and butters…
Headed to Cave Creek Lodge with no time to check the feeders out, but the gal gave me a map of all the feeders in Portal, so that was very helpful! And the room was wonderful – no uninvited critters here!









