Birding the Magical Elixir of Water in the Desert: Part 2

Here is the promised “part 2” for birding the Marana, Arizona region. As noted in Part 1, this area has the Santa Cruz River (with water actually within), the Tucson Water Treatment Plant, and irrigated farmland. The combination of water plus food in the desert equates to a magical elixir for birds. Marana is only about 20 miles via Interstate 10 from Tucson. My first image will be of a map I created (see below). The traffic on these back roads is light, and on this Sunday morning almost non existent. Just do circuits of these roads, and then repeat. The birds constantly change from both northern migrants to desert southwest birds. Just across the Santa Cruz River (region 4) there actually is a small undeveloped park (one picnic shaded shelter) from where you make walk along the river!


Anyhow … the birds of Mirana … with comments.

Okay, people love owls. This region has Burrowing Owls. Anyone who wishes to find the owls and will agree to NEVER posting the location online is welcome to contact me for instructions (owls can get loved to death). See my comment earlier in this blog post about how I will share this location.

Burrowing Owls (These images are of five unique owls)

Blackbirds Taking a Bath (Yellow-Headed and Red-Winged)(flock of over 1,000 blackbirds)

Great Blue Heron (In a field w/o water hunting insects and lizards??)

Great-Tailed Grackle (Female)

Northern Harrier (Male and female)

Pocket Gophers (Found a city of pocket gophers!)

Roadrunner (Meep, meep! Found two couples)

Red-Tailed Hawk

Western Meadowlark (Amazingly close … listen to the video / song)

Airplane Graveyard (Some birds will fly no more!)

Bee Hive without the Hive … Just the Honeycombs (Watch the movie!) I was scanning the cavities for owls!

 

5 thoughts on “Birding the Magical Elixir of Water in the Desert: Part 2

  1. Dear 365: Our friends in Oro Valley, Arizona, love your Magic Elixir posts. Snow, water, cacti, owls, other birds and abandoned aircraft! What’s not to like? Ray

  2. Fabulous photos Richard. Love those burrowing owls. When we lived in Peru we also saw burrowing owls on the northern desert coast. Hope to see the yellow headed blackbirds in Duluth this year. Thank you!

Leave a Reply