Showing posts with label birding. Show all posts
Showing posts with label birding. Show all posts
Wednesday, October 1, 2014
By Angie Kay Dilmore
Eastern Bluebird by Gulf Coast Bird Club Member
Deanna Griggs

I love bird-watching. I enjoy seeing them eat at the feeders in my backyard. I’m thrilled when I spot a heron or egret wading along the shoreline when I paddle my kayak or see a flock of geese flying in V-formation across an autumn sky. But I’m not very good at specifically identifying birds by sight or, worse yet, recognizing their calls and songs. Sure, I’m familiar with the common backyard birds like cardinals, bluejays, eastern bluebirds, and black-capped chickadees. But ask me to differentiate between a red-bellied and a red-headed woodpecker, and I’m stumped.

Brown-headed Nuthatch 
So I sought out some help from our local Gulf Coast Bird Club this past Saturday. They meet for a bird walk the 4th Saturday of every month, 8 a.m, at Sam Houston Jones State Park. On this most recent bird walk, the club spotted wood ducks, nuthatches, Carolina wrens, chickadees, and a variety of woodpeckers, and that was all in the first ten minutes! Experienced birders lead these walks, which are designed for beginner birders.

Carolina Wren
On most walks, the club sees an average of 20-25 different species of birds. “We’re in fall migration season right now, so we’re seeing some different migratory birds; some warblers and northern tanagers,” says David Booth, club founder and vice president of programs.

Hooded Warbler
In addition to the monthly walks, the club occasionally takes field trips to the Lacassine area, Toledo Bend, Smith’s Point, or wildlife refuges such as Cameron Prairie or Sabine.

Snowy Egret
Their next event will be a program called “Listen Up! Birding by Ear,” which will help participants learn to identify birds by their call. This event coincides with Meet the Blind Month. All bird lovers, including the sight impaired, are encouraged to attend this program on October 10, 8 - 9:30 a.m. at Drew Park, 416 Michael DeBakey Dr., Lake Charles. 
Pileated Woodpecker by Gulf Coast Bird Club
Member Deanna Griggs

Blue Heron
The Gulf Coast Bird Club is dedicated to promoting the knowledge and conservation of birdlife, other wildlife, natural habitats and natural resources; and to fostering an appreciation of our natural environment and of the significance of its influence upon human life. Founded in 1983, the club seeks to provide educational opportunities to the general public and to other organizations regarding bird life.

For more information on the club or their events, see their websitejoin their Facebook page, or call 337-526-0837. 

To read more of Angie's adventures, check out her blog, angiekaydilmore.blogspot.com
Thursday, February 27, 2014
Oohs Aahs and Ooh La La Along The Creole Nature Trail
By John K. Flores www.gowiththeflooutdoors.com
Roseate Spoonbills are abundant in Southwest Louisiana.
This picture was taken during a Grosse Savanne Eco-tour.
Photo by John K. Flores

By the end of February, halfway into the six weeks of remaining winter the groundhog forecasted for northerners, the winds begin to shift from north to southerly along coastal Louisiana. And with the winds come weary travelers from Mexico, Central and South America.


Spring is the perfect time, as birds that winter in this paradise are leaving for their summer homes to the north and others are coming in like cosmopolitans from foreign lands. The skilled birder can see over 100 different species in a day when conditions are right. But, for my wife and I, it’s not about the numbers, but about the spectacle.
The Creole Nature Trail does include terrestrial creatures like the ubiquitous alligator Louisiana is known for. But visitors to the region may also see deer, raccoons, and otters.

Cameron Jetty Pier is a good place to see brown
pelicans. Photo by Christine Flores
Their destination isn’t Houston or New Orleans International, nor are they carried inside the bellies of jet-propelled steel machines. No, they lift off from places like the tropical forests of the Yucatan, the hills of Chiapas, and beaches of the Antigua crossing the Gulf of Mexico under the power of their own wings. With a make or break passage their terminals are the safe harbor of the marshes, prairie and few remaining oak cheniers of Southwest Louisiana.

Each year on my birthday, which happens to coincide with the peak of the spring migration, my spouse and I travel the Creole Nature Trail All-American Road. Starting in Sulphur, we travel LA-27 to Sabine National Wildlife Refuge, to Johnson Bayou and Peveto Woods Bird Sanctuary on LA-82. And from there it’s again on LA-27 to Cameron Prairie NWR, LA-14 to Lacassine NWR and as many back roads of agricultural fields in the region we can fit into our two-day trip.

Perhaps nowhere else in the country is the communication between spouses limited to,  “Ooh-ooh-ooh,” or “Aah – did you see that? Stop the car! Look, look, look! You’re blocking traffic!” Indeed the Creole Nature Trail is full of excitement for birdwatchers and nature lovers. 

The prothonotary warbler is a neotropic songbird that arrives
each spring across the Gulf of Mexico and can be seen at Sam
Houston Jones State Park. Photo by John K. Flores 
We enjoy the “ooh la la” regalia of neotropic songbirds and roseate spoonbills, the odd looking caracara, and the clown-like ibis. Always a surprise is a cinnamon teal or vermilion flycatcher too far east. And when a flock of blue-winged teal rises from a roadside pond with a group of males marked with moon shape crescents on their cheeks, no one can hold back an ooh and aah.

The hospitality of Southwest Louisiana awaits those from around the world and Lake Charles offers cuisine and comfort with numerous places to stay overnight. It’s up to you to find the oohs, aahs and ooh la la of Southwest Louisiana. And, you don’t have to go far down the Creole Nature Trail, All-American Road to find them.


The northern parula is a friendly neotropic
songbird that spends summers in coastal
Louisiana. This picture was taken in swamp area
teeming with willow trees. Photo by John K. Flores
Snowy egrets feeding their chicks are a special
treat in Southwest Louisiana when you stumble
upon a rookery. Grosse Savanne Eco-tours offers day
trips where nature lovers can enjoy these birds.
Photo by Christine Flores

This hooded warbler was caught feeding at Peveto Woods
Bird & Butterfly Sanctuary off of LA-82. Photo by John K. Flores

The rose-breasted gros beak only stops
long enough in coastal Louisiana to eat and 
get its strength back to head north. Picture
taken at Sabine National Wildlife Refuge.
Photo by John K. Flores