Hi all,
I spent yesterday and this morning birding the southwestern corner of
the state. On Sunday I visited a number of sites in Jackson and Nobles
counties, and this morning I spent about five hours at Blue Mounds State
Park in Rock County. I was not disappointed, with big waves of migrant
passerines almost everywhere I went, as well as many breeding species on
territory or already nesting.
Migrant warblers and thrushes were particularly abundant, with large
numbers of Catharus thrushes at most sites, and 21 warbler species for
the trip, most of them quite common. Tennessee Warblers were literally
everywhere, with almost every woodlot holding at least a few. Sparrows
were also abundant, with 13 species plus Eastern Towhee. I found a
number of species to be much more common and widespread than I expected,
including Cape May Warbler, Olive-sided Flycatcher, Yellow-throated
Vireo, and Gray-cheeked Thrush. I also searched unsuccessfully for Blue
Grosbeak and Great-tailed Grackle in locations where they've been found
in the past.
The big revelation of the trip for me was Black Bridge Road near
Jackson, where I encountered wave after wave of warblers, 4 species of
vireos (including Bell's and Philadelphia), numerous flycatchers,
Scarlet Tanager, ~15 Swainson's Thrushes and multiple Gray-cheeked
Thrushes. I clearly caught this spot on the right day, but the mix of
habitats, right along the Des Moines River, makes for fantastic birding
in migration.
My short list of highlights for the trip includes:
- Bell's Vireo, along Black Bridge Road, just northwest of the town of
Jackson in Jackson County
- Blue-winged Warbler, at Fury Island Park on East Graham Lake in
northeastern Nobles County
- White-faced Ibis, at the wetland just west of the south end of East
Graham Lake, on Town Avenue in northeastern Nobles County
For those interested, a longer list of highlights with specific
locations is below. This was my first birding trip to this part of the
state, and it was fantastic!
Good birding,
Matt Dufort
Minneapolis, MN
Here's the longer list of highlights:
Jackson County
Loon Lake area (Brown and Robertson county parks)
- Eurasian Collared-Dove - 1 calling at Brown County Park
- Blue-gray Gnatcatcher - 4 at Robertson County Park
- many warbler species, with Cape May Warbler the most unusual
Big Spirit Lake and surrounds
- Caspian, Forster's, Common, and Black Terns (all mostly or solely in
Iowa)
- Bonaparte's and Franklin's Gulls (no Black-headed)
- Wilson's Phalarope
Jackson sewage ponds
- Red-necked Phalarope - 2
- Spotted Sandpiper - 9
- Purple Martin
- Black Tern
Black Bridge Road northwest of Jackson
- Bell's Vireo, singing and seen well, just south of the I-90 overpass
- Philadelphia Vireo, ditto
- Yellow-throated Vireo
- Scarlet Tanager
- wave after wave of migrant warblers and thrushes, with many
individuals including Cape May and Parula
- Willow, Least, and Olive-sided Flycatchers
South Heron Lake
- 1 Western Grebe was about the only bird on the lake
Nobles County
Fury Island Park
- Blue-winged Warbler - one male singing consistently and seen well
- many other warblers, including Blackburnian, Cape May, and many
Blackpoll
- Olive-sided Flycatcher
- Yellow-throated Vireo
wetland along Town Avenue, southwest of East Graham Lake
- White-faced Ibis - 1 adult
- Franklin's Gull
- Eastern Kingbird - flock of 21!
- American Pipit
- Least, Semipalmated, and Baird's Sandpipers
Rock County
Gravel pit ponds southeast of Blue Mounds SP
- Snow Goose
- Caspian Tern
- Black Tern
Blue Mounds State Park
- Yellow-throated Vireo
- Blue-gray Gnatcatcher - 1 in the campground
- many warblers, including Northern Parula and Cape May
- tons of sparrows, including Lincoln's, Harris's, White-throated,
White-crowned, Field, Grasshopper, Savannah, Clay-colored, Chipping,
Lark, Song, and Vesper
- Sandhill Crane - 1 calling near the campground
- Eastern Towhee - hoping for Spotted, but no such luck
- Black-crowned Night-Heron - 5
- Marbled Godwit - 1 on the bison range
- Upland Sandpiper - in the fields below the escarpment
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