Wednesday, May 19, 2021

Plants and Birds and Other Items

In this blog post we will look at a few birds, a few plants and some other items. It should be fun and entertaining. Let us see what we have here.



This is a plant called a Sacred Datura. It is a perennial plant that we see around here in Southern Arizona in the late spring. It is a very nice looking flower but it is poisonous. Purportedly it is sometimes used as a hallucinogen due to its psychoactive alkaloids but we have not tried that facet of the plant as of yet and most likely won’t.



This is another plant or was a plant, mostly twigs now. It was an Anaheim Pepper plant in our small garden but the mice decided they needed a pepper leaf salad for dinner.

There are now a few less mice in the area. Everyone around here has mice problems in their gardens, it is really dry and it seems there is little food for them hence the garden is a great smorgasbord. Last year we had no mice problems what so ever.

This is a Northern-rough Winged Swallow in flight. The swallows are really hard to capture while in flight. They are very irregular in their movements and rather fast. I am only glad for the digital camera and not having to incur the time and expense of slides just trying to get an image of one of these swallows.


Here is a fascinating ant mound. Our good friend Rodger says they are Harvester Ants because of all the green vegetation around the ant hill. It was most curious as there is no green vegetation with 25 -30 feet of this circle. They certainly are busy.


This is an Ash-throated Flycatcher. According to the Audubon Web site and other Internet sources "they live in dry terrain where trees are often small or scarce, they will resort to other sites for nesting; nests have been found in such odd places as exhaust pipes, hollow fence posts, mailboxes, and even in trousers hanging on a clothesline." Certainly an enterprising bird.


When the cactus blooms it can be really spectacular. Lots of beautiful color and often time many flowers from a relatively small plant.


This is a Ladder-backed Woodpecker going after what is left of an orange. The oranges attract a wide variety of bird species probably for the sugar content and resultant energy. If you look closely at the photo you will see the ants are attracted to the orange as well. The woodpecker might add a little protein to his meal with some of the ants. Some of the woodpeckers especially the Northern Flicker feed a lot on ants.

This wild flower blooms in the spring and much of the summer and is called a prickly poppy. Many of the flowers around here have many names but prickly seems appropriate for this plant. The leaf structure seems to resemble a thistle. We see these in a lot of place as we travel around, not in big massive fields like the California Poppies but in sufficient quantity to catch your attention.


This is a good example of a Lark Sparrow. For some reason there is an extreme abundance of this species this year. We see them everywhere. They are easy to identify due to the striking facial markings.


No this is not our “Bird Mobile”. We saw this in the Safeway parking lot. There are a number of owls on the roof and almost every square inch of the vehicle is covered with bird or other paraphernalia, even the wheels for the tires. I think the resale value has been dramatically reduced unless you find that certain someone who just has to have this car. Not sure if you have to wax the car to maintain it's pristine condition.


In an earlier blog post we showed a Summer Tanager female, she was a different color than this, here is the male of the species, bright red in color.


This is a Wilson ’s warbler. Warblers are pretty much migratory birds. They pass through here in the spring heading north. This bird was grabbing an insect on a branch higher up and was coming back down when I got this image. They are yellow with a pronounced black cap.


This is an American Coot. They are not the most graceful flyers and need to run across the water to get airborne. The image shows a little action. They are seen in and around the water all the time but their feet are not webbed, as a duck's feet are, they are lobed, hence when they swim it is with a really jerky motion.


Here is an adult Black-crowned Night Heron. They feed on fish and aquatic critters. They will sit by the edge pf the water and wait for an unsuspecting meal to swim by where they will hurriedly grab them with their large beak.


This is a juvenile or young Black-crowned Night Heron. He has not developed the coloration of the adult. He spent a lot of time just loafing and basking in the sun. The adult in the above image was not very far away we are sure keeping a watchful eye. Note how large the beak is on this juvenile, one serious beak.


This image of a hummingbird was interesting due to the lighting. I was trying to stop the wings in motion and had a fast shutter speed. The camera in its compensation made the background dark. I used some software to lighten up the image and achieve this effect.

We hope you enjoyed this look at some plants and birds and perhaps your future bird mobile, or at least an inventive mode of transportation with some creative ideas for your own car.
Please let us know if you have any questions or comments.

All the best – George & Deanna

Sunday, May 9, 2021

Patton's Center for Hummingbirds

If you are ever in Southeast Arizona in the town of Patagonia you must stop at Patton’s. It is a house close to downtown that was for years and years owned and maintained by a couple named Patton. They passed away a few years back and the family sold the property to Tucson Audubon. It is a fabulous place for bird watching.



Welcome to the Tucson Audubon Patton’s Center for Hummingbirds. This is a sign posted as you enter the parking lot.

There is some amount of parking on the property with additional space out on the street.

This shows the area leaving the car and walking towards the house. It is early May 2021 and the sign asks that you keep your mask on. The Center was closed for much of the time during Covid-19 pandemic. Patagonia is in Santa Cruz County and the county had a very high rate of infection. There are feeders and birding areas and trails to walk along both ahead and to the left in this image.

One of the first birds we noticed after parking and getting out of the car was this group of Lazuli Bunting. The one sitting on the right of the feeder is a female while the two brightly blue colored birds are males of the species. Birds are everywhere around the property.


This is an informative sign that describes the area and provides a small map with a layout. There is also information on the Tucson Audubon Web Site that can be read by CLICKING HERE

There are Javelina often seen around the property. Though some people think Javelina is a type of wild pig, they are actually members of the peccary family, a group of hoofed mammals originating from South America. Javelina are common in much of central and southern Arizona. They are also called stink pigs for a good reason, they really stink.

There is a variety of feeding stations around the property. Here is a Western Tanager feeding on an orange at one of the stations.

As you walk along the path to the backyard you see more feeders and brush piles and more birds.

There is a cover in the backyard with chairs and benches underneath. You have excellent views of the area behind the house and a variety of brush piles and open wooded area for spotting birds.



There is no fee to tour the property, take pictures, and enjoy the birds. There is this “sugar fund” donation box.

It is a good idea to put a few dollars in to help ensure the place stays open, they can feed the birds, and you can continue to enjoy them.

This is a Broad-billed Hummingbird. It is very striking in its coloration. Hummingbirds are the only birds that can fly backwards. Not sure if in this picture it is looking at something above or stretching its neck.

This is a female Broad-billed Hummingbird, not nearly as brightly colored as the male.

We had seen the Western Tanager eating on the oranges in an earlier image. There were a lot of oranges at various places around the property. Here we find these two that have been all used up. The birds really like the oranges. Certainly some of the sugar fund money will be used to buy oranges as well.

There are a lot of brush piles scattered about the property. Here is a Pyrrhuloxia using one of the piles.  

In one portion of the backyard along a trail is this pond. It has running water from a pump and provides additional habitat for the birds

While watching one of the hummingbird feeders we heard this insect like sound and realized it was the Broad-tailed hummingbird. Male Broad-tailed Hummingbirds make an insect like, metallic trill with their wings while flying that can be quite loud. Not sure why they would make such a sound but they do.

Violet-crowned Hummingbird. Later in the year there will be 12-13 different species of hummingbirds at Patton’s.


This Black-headed Grosbeak was using the pond for a drink.


Abert’s Towhee, using the brush pile to look for food and gain some protective cover.

This is a female Summer Tanager. The male is bright red but we could not get his picture while we were there, hopefully next time.



Here is a White-breasted Nuthatch walking down the tree looking for insects in the cracks of the tree.

This is a Yellow-breasted Chat. They can be very vocal and have a wide repertoire of calls but this one was quiet. They will head north for the summer.




Once you are through enjoying the birds mosey over the few blocks to Patagonia and have lunch and dessert at one of the several eateries there, they all have great food.

There were a lot of other bird species at Patton's when we were there. The spring migration was passing through. It is a fabulous place and well done by Tucson Audubon.


There is a web cam on one of the feeders and you can watch the action if you wish.

https://tucsonaudubon.org/go-birding/tucson-audubons-paton-center-for-hummingbirds/paton-center-web-cams/


We hope you enjoyed the visit to Patton’s and that you get an opportunity to visit there in the not too distant future. There are lots of birds to watch, it is a truly fascinating place.

Please let us know if you have any questions or comments.

All the best – George & Deanna