Just finished the trail at Clapp and it was just as Joe said. The Warbling
Vireo was silent but active and I saw it several times btwn the telephone pole
and lone cedar across from the night-heron nest. I also saw 2 MacGillivrays and
a Common Yellowthroat. Also saw 2 immature somethings that I think were
cowbirds but i had to move for people and then they were gone. Lots of
mosquitoes, too.
Vireo tip: when in doubt between a vireo or warbler, look at the legs. All
vireos have dusky blue legs! (They can look just dark in deep shade). Verdin
and Titmice can have blue legs, too. There are other things like bill shape and
general structure to help between warblers and vireos, too, but leg color is a
quick way to help narrow the little, active ones down :)
Jennifer
Jennifer Miller
Lubbock, TX
(o,o)
/)_)
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Email: foundnatureblog@xxxxxxxxx
Blog:
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On May 22, 2020, at 11:41 AM, Jennifer Miller <foundnatureblog@xxxxxxxxx>
wrote:
Thanks, Joe! Love the pics :)
On Fri, May 22, 2020 at 11:37 AM Joe Cochran <JCochran2@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
wrote:
There were several Yellow Warblers and Wilson’s Warblers along the nature
trail and I also found this Warbling Vireo on the nature trail near the
telephone poll. It was very vocal when I was there.
--
Jennifer Miller
Lubbock, TX
(o,o)
/)_)
" "
Blog - http://foundnature.weebly.com/index.html