| Yucutan Wren - Iain Campbell Tropical Birding tour report: The Yucutan and Palenque
 
 Yucutan Wren - Iain Campbell
 
 The first stop this morning was the nearby botanic gardens. Just a few
 minutes after arriving we were finding Yucat??n endemics:
 Yucat??n Woodpecker, Yucat??n
 Vireo, White-browed Wren, and Black Catbird. Flocks of Neotropical
 migrants
 were quite conspicuous. Northern Parula, American Redstart, Northern
 Waterthrush, and “Myrtle”, Black-throated Green,
 “Western” Palm, and
 Black-and-white Warblers made up the bulk, with small numbers of Lesser
 Greenlet, Bananaquit, and White-eyed Vireo. Roving flocks of Brown Jays
 screamed as they passed overhead, loosely associated with a nice mix of
 orioles: Altamira, Black-cowled, and Hooded. Green-backed Sparrows and
 Red-throated Ant-Tanagers called from the undergrowth. Large flocks of
 migrant
 Indigo Buntings had some “Eastern” Blue Buntings
 and Yellow-faced Grassquits
 mixed in. A very confiding Ivory-billed Woodcreeper gave us our first
 looks at
 that tropical family.
 After
 a leisurely lunch we
 headed west to Chich??n Itz??. The main attraction
 here, El Castillo, is amazing
 and incredibly intact for such an old structure. We spent most of our
 time here
 simply enjoying the ruins rather than outright birding, but we did see
 a few
 birds along the way. Yellow-backed Oriole, Cinnamon Hummingbird,
 Rose-breasted
 Grosbeak, and Scrub Euphonia were noted.
 
 31 Jan:
 An early morning start had us outside R??o Lagartos by sunrise.
 Immediately we
 found both Couch’s and Tropical Kingbirds singing away. A
 family of Orange
 Orioles showed nicely in the warm morning light as Yucat??n
 (Black-throated)
 Bobwhites sang nearby. We had nice looks at a stunning male Mexican
 Sheartail. Aztec
 Parakeets and White-fronted Amazons were both common and conspicuous as
 they
 flew about in noisy flocks. A Laughing Falcon perched up high while a
 pair of
 Crested Caracaras flew by. Investigation of piercing screaming calls
 turned up
 a pair of Limpkins perched on a dead snag, seemingly out-of-place in
 the dry
 desert scrub. They were using nearby marsh habitat, though, and we soon
 encountered other marsh birds like Crane Hawk and Tricolored
 Heron.
 |