I was showing another birder, Bob Anderson, around the Dirty Shirt Woods, and we were having a great day when we saw 2 warblers squabbling in a Ponderosa. I looked at the beautiful male Audubon's, and Bob said his was not an Audubon's. I looked and saw a very yellow throat and 2 strong wingbars. Neither one of us had any idea what we had just seen, so we figured if two decent birders did not know what they had seen we had better get good looks. It was singing fairly regularly, so we were able to track it down. Finally, we got a good look as it worked on the end of a branch of a Ponderosa. It had a bright yellow throat with a white belly, 2 strong wingbars, no noticeable stripes on the front of the bird, yellow in the eyebrow, and gray around the eye, but no black. A Grace's Warbler, and a life bird for me.
We were on the east side of the Dirty Shirt Woods, probably about 1/4 mile up from the edge of the woods. The last time we saw the bird it was less than 100 yards from the east side of the woods. It was singing enough that we could refind the bird after it flew. We saw it about noon. Bob Anderson is going to put the GPS coordinates in his ebird report. I will tell my son, Ben, to expect birders looking for this warbler. Birders will not need additional permission to cross Eagle Ridge Ranch land.
We do ask that you
not use play back of bird songs or harass the other birds. There are also Pinyon Jays with young in the area, and they are very sensitive to disturbance at this time of year.
Below is a list of what we saw.
Morning Dove
Nighthawk
Turkey Vulture
Golden Eagle
Cooper's Hawk
Flicker
Western Wood-pewee
Plumbeous Vireo
Pinyon Jay
Clark's Nutcracker
Black-capped Chickadee
White-brested Nuthatch
House Wren
Rock Wren
Robin
Yellow-rumped Warbler
Grace's Warbler
Western Tanager
Green-tailed Towhee
Chipping Sparrow
Lark Sparrow
Meadowlark
Red Crossbill
Pine Siskin
Stacey Scott
Casper