Montana Tour Reports for 2006
Not far, less than 1/2 mile from our campsite is the Bentsen Rio Grande Valley State Park, famous for it's birding.  Here is their home web page, http://www.worldbirdingcenter.org/sites/mission/, it is easier to tell you where to look than to explain it all here.  With the new camera in hand, off we went to one of the birding blinds.  Here are a few photos:
Left:  A Golden-fronted Woodpecker, he is about 10 inches long.  His home is Texas and Mexico. 
Left:  These lovely little blue birds are Indigo Bunting.  Their habitat runs from Michigan to Texas, East Coast to about the Rocky Mountains (from what I can tell from the map in my bird book).  I have only seen this bird one other time, and that was in Michigan at one of our State Parks.  These little guys are 5 1/2 inches long.  These birds were seen at Bentsen Rio Grande Valley State Park on March 31, 2006 and were about 30 feet or more away from us.  Al did a great job getting a photo with that new camera.
This is Altamira Oriole.  He lives in southernmost Texas and in Mexico.  He is such a vivid color he takes your breath away when he comes flying into a feeder area.  When seen with the Green Jay (see below) their colors actually seem to enhance each other.  This guy is about 10 inches tall.
This is a Green Jay, they are quite prevalent here, he is about 10 1/2 inches long, and I have to tell you, this photo, as good as Al did, does not do this bird justice.  His back is a glorious color of green, and has shades and hues that are hard to describe. When seen in a group, they remind me of parakeets and the jungle.  His attitude reminds me somewhat of the Blue Jay from home. The Green Jay is considered a Tropical bird, whose range JUST reaches the southern tip of Texas, specifically the Rio Grande Valley.
Copyright 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009 by Carol A. Bowen Stevens