Whooper Country Adventure (Texas) Part 6 - Whoopers with the Sims
© 2025 Alamo Birding Services LLC
By Mary Beth Stowe
It was an interesting last day of the trip (and am I glad I scouted Kevin’s dock in the daylight); Kevin had actually called me the day before (right as we were embarking on Cap’n Tommy’s boat, actually) to say that the forecast was for fog and then overcast skies, and did I still want to do the trip? Of course! I quickly told him I’d see him at six the next morning.

We leave at oh-dark-hundred in order to get to the refuge by dawn!
But aside from spitting just a little bit at one point, the overcast skies were just fine and dandy for photography! The first spot we stopped at shortly after sunrise had a Yellowthroat bouncing around, then Lori (Kevin’s wife) spotted a Clapper Rail out in the open! Apparently Kevin missed that one altogether, as he kept thinking I needed it throughout the morning, but this guy was at our feet! While that was going on I heard a Seaside Sparrow singing, so Lori called him in, and WOW – what video! That little guy just put on the best performance!

Clapper Rail at our feet!

Very cooperative Seaside Sparrow
Honestly, everything was anticlimactic after that (even the Whoopers, I hate to say), and it was rather quiet, but additional video highlights included a Caracara on a huge dead fish, both Forster’s and Caspian Terns together, some Bufflehead that Kevin skirted a reef to get, and maybe, just maybe, enough composite video of a Marsh Wren to do some good! Oh, and we pulled in to try and call out a Swamp Sparrow I heard peeping (actually, I wanted to make sure it really was a Swamp Sparrow and not a Phoebe), and they were cooperative as well! Also finally saw the Tree Swallows Tommy kept seeing yesterday that I couldn’t, and had a flock of dowitchers wheeling in circles that was kinda fun.

Caracara with major prize
But they worked hard to find Whoopers for me; one was actually one of the banded ones (Blue-Black-Blue), and the one we saw yesterday with the transmitter is apparently over 20 years old! They were telling me that the average life span of a Whooper in the wild was somewhere in the 20s, but there was one in captivity that actually reached 60! There was another “invisible” pair that was bugling, so Kevin cut the motor so I could at least get audio! We were actually heading back to port when Lori spotted two Whoopers flying to a central island behind us, so we wheeled around and snuck up on them, and they stayed put (all the others started walking away as we approached, but this was evidently a pair that Kevin said “couldn’t care less” about the boats)! So they gave some beautiful photo ops in their native habitat, especially this one that waded into the water to catch something! During one shoot I could hear another Seaside Sparrow singing right next to us, and I thought, “No, you are not going to tempt me until I’m done here!” But he stayed put to be filmed as well; this one had his back to us, so it was nice to get video of both poses!

We finally find a pair of Whoopers that doesn’t mind close approach!

This bird feeding in the reflective water was a highlight!
After we pulled in we kissed goodbye and I hit the Exxon, then returned my friend Derek Muschalek’s call (he wanted to know where I had the Least Bitterns at Aransas, and when I called him back he was looking at them!). I then headed over to the Linda S. Castro Nature Sanctuary (which, despite Siri, I got turned around trying to find; she must have said, “Proceed to the route” five times before I found the right road). Ate some chicken and then checked out the teeny little place; it was the worst time of day (and the sun had come out as we were arriving in Lamar, much to Kevin’s chagrin, I’m sure), so about the only things moving around were Cardinals and Yellow-rumped Warblers, but the cute little pond had a pair of Green-winged Teal, both Great and Snowy Egrets (“Greg and Sneg”), and even a Common Green Darner! A Phaon Crescent actually stood still for pictures as well, and got a cute video of a medium-sized Red-eared Slider pushing the baby one off the log while the big one just sat there… I discovered they had a drip, so I dragged out The Monster and sat for 15, but nothing came in; it was just a nice time to commune with the Lord!

Red-eared Sliders
Next was Rockport Beach Park, and that is indeed the place I had stumbled upon during my first road trip to Texas that had all the skimmers, but that I couldn’t find on the last trip after moving to the Valley! Only the skimmers hadn’t shown up yet – only the Laughing Gulls were carrying on and getting ready to breed! (Since their nesting area is very clearly marked telling people not to disturb the birds, I felt mildly guilty when I got The Monster out and they all up and left, but they shortly came back…) I was filming the habitat and enjoying the gulls going past the field of view for effect, when I noticed they had all lifted off again, only this time it was because of a Peregrine! In another parking lot some gals in a car were feeding the gulls and getting in-your-face photos with their iPhones, which in turn allowed me to get some nice video of hovering gulls!

Territorial Laughing Gulls
There were a few Ring-billed Gulls hanging around, so I filmed them with the Powershot out the window, along with a couple of turnstones. They also had an island where they had heron nesting platforms, but those weren’t as picturesque as The Rookery (which was right across the inlet, I noticed). Some ducks in the inlet turned out to be Blue-winged Teal, and both flavors of pelicans lazed on the island’s little “beach”. I knew I was gonna get laughed at 😊, but I had to film the Starlings that were all lined up on the palm fronds in beautiful light! On the way out I spotted a Long-billed Curlew working the edge of the marsh, so I ran ahead of him to get him in better light, and he put on a great show, eventually marching right past me!

Long-billed Curlew
It was time to go “home” after that. Headed to my real home the next morning with no inclement weather, but made a quick crawl along the harbor first just in case any bay ducks were hanging around. Nothing but gulls, cormorants, and pelicans, so headed south, not really expecting to pick up any trip birds, but apparently the Harris’ Hawk along the freeway was a trip bird; I was sure I had seen one on the way up! (Maybe I did but forgot to enter it into eBird…) And I had completely forgotten that I was considering stopping to look for Aplomado Falcons on Mustang Island, but as it was, I was glad I hustled home, because the police had my street roped off – long story short, a parade was coming! So I snuck in the back way (thankfully you could make a left on Alamo Road), and by the time I got through unpacking, Main Street was packed!! Also added one last trip bird after pulling up: Curve-billed Thrasher, bringing the trip total to 124! (And the celebration turned out to be Texas Independence Day…)









