Archive for May, 2009
Provence 2009: Along the Road
Posted by: | CommentsIt started tonight, the 2009 WINGS tour to Provence, with a fantastic meal at Gueule du Loup–the wolf’s maw. All I can say is, if wolves eat like that, lycanthropy here I come!
I can’t wait to get out in the field with the group tomorrow. Today, in expectation of the start of the tour, it was around and about buying supplies, picking up permits, and so on. Of course, it wasn’t all so prosaic as that.
At one point, trying to get across from Le Sambuc to the Salin de Badon, there was a major traffic jam, Camargue style.

So what else could I do but slip off onto a well-graveled track and look for birds?

Probably shouldn’t jinx it, but something tells me that Spanish Yellow Wagtail won’t be much of a problem. And gratifyingly enough, I think the same could be said of European Bee-eater, still one of the prettiest birds you’ll ever see.

This was one of a couple of dozen bee-eaters munching on dragonflies over a pasture, where they were obviously nesting in the low banks of dry ditches.
Finally tore myself away and made it to Salin de Badin, where the loafing flock of Red-crested Pochard comprised 113 visible birds, most of them looking pretty ratty, but an impressive tally all the same. And a Kentish Plover flew in to feed right on the roadside a little farther south, another nice “target bird” for the tour.

But the wonders of the Camargue will wait a couple of days, as tomorrow we’re following in Petrarch’s footsteps up Mont Ventoux–in the poet’s own words, “to see what’s up there.” Hope it’s a lot!
Provence: A Foretaste
Posted by: | CommentsAlready it seems a long time and far away from the Lesser Nighthawks, Brown-crested Flycatchers, and White-winged Doves that serenaded yesterday mornings’ 4:30 departure from Tucson. Sure, I miss ‘em already, but it’s hard to be despondent while I’m watching Common Swifts and listening to Black Redstarts and Common Greenfinches start their evening carol.
Common city birds, of course, and species we’ll all be familiar enough with at the end of our ten days together. But some incidental scouting today–a short visit to Peau de Meau in the noontime heat, an evening drive through the northern Camargue–also turned up some of the “fancies” for which Mediterranean France is famous.
I didn’t have much hope of seeing anything but Black Kites and Black-billed Magpies out at PdeM in the heat. Nice surprise indeed, then, to see three European Rollers, two of them together and decidedly “couply,” giving hope that they’ll still be there when our WINGS group’s visit later in the week. No bustards or sandgrouse, unfortunately, but there was a pair of Stone-curlews quite close to the parking lot, giving excellent views as they strode between heat waves.
Lunch at the Hotel Crau was excellent as ever, so I made reservations for the group for later in the week. Then to Arles, and then out to Chassagne and the Mas d’Agon to see what was around. There were two European Bee-eaters at Ste-Cecilie, and the big pool just north of Mas d’Agon had the usual (the usual!) Whiskered Terns, Great Crested Grebes, and Purple Herons. Common Cuckoos were singing, audible even above the Common Nightingales and Cetti’s Warblers, and as the evening cooled slightly, Great Reed Warblers and Zitting Cisticolas once again began to reflect visible light. (Best views ever of one of the cisticolas, in fact, once I figured out where its favored perches were.)

An hour on the “new” observation tower at the southern end of the Mas d’Agon road was great for a big slouch–no benches, just railings to lean against. I’d never spent that much time up there, and was impressed this evening, with fly-by Squacco Heron and White Spoonbill, more than a hundred Mediterranean Gulls, Black-winged Stilts–almost the whole Camargue gang.
I’ll keep updating the bird list from each day of the tour, which starts officially tomorrow evening, so check back if you want to see what we’ve been seeing. And I’ll try to find time to take another picture or two–if all these birds will just give me a moment!
And Off to Provence!
Posted by: | CommentsJust a few hours now until a series of great silver birds lifts me across the ocean. I’m hoping to be able to keep the “blog” up to date during my WINGS tour to Provence–and the few days of scouting Tuscany thereafter.

The view from Les Baux--look close, and you can probably see a Crag Martin or a Blue Rock Thrush.
Desert Spiny Lizard
Posted by: | CommentsWe have a bumper crop of especially beautiful spiny lizards this year, among them this nicely colored Desert Spiny.
My next lizard may well be a Green Lizard, tomorrow in Mediterranean France!
White-winged Dove
Posted by: | CommentsWhite-winged Doves are perhaps the most abundant summer birds in southeast Arizona, common, conspicuous, and gluttonous everywhere in the desert lowlands. For that very reason, there are short-sighted people (even birders!) who don’t like them; but even those of us who are fond of the species sometimes forget just how beautiful this enormously familiar bird is.
No pheasant, no antbird rivals that face, almost reptilian in the beauty of its bare blue skin and orange iris.







