N America - US - Texas - Whooper Country Adventure 1 - Aransas
© 2024 Alamo Birding Services LLC
By Mary Beth Stowe
(Note: the Whooper Country Adventure travelogues are taken from a personal journal I kept up while on a video shoot in the Rockport area, targeting Whooping Cranes. I've only included a few photos here; more photos - and video - will be available in the actual video series coming soon!)
Added a handful of Rio Grande Valley birds to the trip list starting out and headed up US 77, stopping at the Sarita rest stop , and that worked out great, adding Brewer’s Blackbird to the list! Refugio was the convenient second stop, so we filled up, and headed on in to the refuge!

Obligatory entrance sign
As I told Keith (my boss) later, I’m glad we checked it out this day, as the rain threat was up to 70% the next day! It was really rather quiet; on the Rail Trail had a “marsh” wren that to this moment I’m not sure if it was Marsh or Sedge, as it was making a really strange scold that could have been either! Had my sandwich at the other end of the Rail Trail, where a couple of huge Alligators were lazing near the trail! Again, very quiet, the most exciting thing being a Black Vulture back at the bridge (which I inadvertently scared off before a guy had a chance to shoot him). But after that I figured it would be smart to go directly to the Observation Tower and work my way back.
Gator by the bridge
That turned out to be a great strategy: a pair of Whoopers was way out there, but not too far for the Canon Powershot to pick up (I figured that would be a great addition to the overall Whooper video, as that’s how most people see them from within the refuge)! The day’s only White Pelican was also there, along with gobs of Great Egrets. Hiked the boardwalk after that, which was really quiet (another lady pointed out the fish kill from the Big Freeze); some Brown Pelicans were way out there on a structure, and a Ring-billed Gull and Reddish Egret flew by, but that was about it! Had a very cooperative Kestrel on the way out, though!
This is about as close as you can expect to get to the Whoopers on the “public” part of the refuge!
I definitely wanted to check out Jones Lake, as that’s always productive (except when it’s dry), and it didn’t disappoint this time: tons of wigeon, plus a few Shovelers and Gadwall were there, along with a Pied-billed Grebe (no Least this time). A couple of Greater Yellowlegs were fighting, so that was fun! The last place I wanted to check before time ran out was the Heron Flats Trail, which actually had quite a few things: spoonbills, White Ibis, more egrets, a Tricolored, and a bona fide Sedge Wren doing both recognizable calls!
American Wigeon
Headed to Rockport after that, and approaching Goose Island, I couldn’t help myself: I had to swing by that pasture in Lamar and see if I could break my streak (of seeing no Whoopers when everyone else always sees them there)! And by golly, this time I hit pay dirt with a pair way in the back! But I also realized that that wasn’t the usual pasture I used to check out; a little further down was the big pasture, that was loaded with Sandhill Cranes, egrets, spoonbills, Black-bellied Whistling Ducks, and grackles! (Also found out after the fact that that’s where someone had found an American Crow, apparently rare here…) I’m sure the Whoopers would show up there as well, as it’s right around the corner from the Big Tree, where they’ve also been reported. The Herring Gulls on the little pier were almost ignored!
My first Lamar Whooping Cranes!
Rolled into the La Quinta a happy camper, ready for the next day's adventure!
To be continued...









