Southeast Arizona Adventure Part 7 - Mt Lemmon
© 2024 Alamo Birding Services LLC
By Mary Beth Stowe
Was seriously thinking about skipping Mount Lemmon and just doing Saguaro, and maybe scouting Madera before heading to Canelo Ranch for the weekend break. As it turns out, I shoulda stuck with that plan, but after reviewing BirdsEye, there were more potential targets along the Mt. Lemmon route than the Saguaro route, so we did that. This was the first time I actually got to do it “BBS style”, and I have to say that the scenery was gorgeous, but the birds were quiet: saw the dawn in at the first pullout, with mainly Black-throated Sparrows. Picked up a nice Blue Grosbeak at Molina Canyon along with a singing Bell’s Vireo, and at the Prison Camp a Raven was making funny noises, and an Arizona Woodpecker came bounding in! The highlight at one of the vistas was a singing Rock Wren that was actually visible, and at another stop a Black-throated Gray Warbler came in for good looks! Windy Point didn’t have any swifts like last time, but it was fun in that there were several rappelers there having a big time!

Molina Vista

Common Raven (left) and Blue Grosbeak

The old prison camp, now called Gordon Hirabayashi Campground

Black-throated Gray Warbler (left) and Spotted Towhee

Windy Vista
Had a hard time getting a signal, so when I got into the first of the high altitude stops at Willow Canyon, I had to use the last place I was able to get, and it didn’t like my Olive Warbler! 😊 Same with some of the campgrounds up there where I had to explain Steller’s Jays and Pygmy Nuthatches! Was finally able to get a signal at Bear Wallow, so I spent an inordinate amount of time uploading all those previous checklists (and decided not to do any more unless I had something new)! Unfortunately didn’t spot the Short-tailed Hawk, or any other hawk for that matter (Incinerator Ridge was like another Carr Canyon, so I didn’t go far on that one before making an about-face); at Marshall Gulch I ran into the couple I met at Beatty’s yesterday, and they reported a little feeding flock along there and told me where it was, but by the time I got back there it had started raining…

Bear Wallow

Mullein flower (left) and Yellow-eyed Junco

Creek at Marshall Gulch Campground
Backing up, I checked out Ski Valley where I filmed some Acorn Woodpeckers on a pole, but the trailhead at the end of the road was packed with cars (evidently a big family gathering), so I wheeled back to Summerhaven where I couldn’t find that big restaurant with the hummer feeders; I wonder if it burned down or something? Anyway, there were more people than birds up there, so after I wrapped up at Marshall Gulch I headed back down through the aforementioned mini-monsoon…

View from Ski Valley (left) and Acorn Woodpecker
Had enough time to do a quick run-through of Saguaro after all, where, despite the 100+ degree heat, Rufous-winged Sparrows were singing throughout the route! (I think the Blackthroats outnumbered them, though…) The Gilded Flickers were laying low (don’t blame them), and my camera battery was dying, so finished that up quickly and headed down to Canoa Ranch, and thankfully got checked in before the monster monsoon hit!

Eastern portion of Saguaro National Park (before the camera died)

Monster monsoon coming down the I-19









