Spring Birding Trip

Trying to put a name to what we just saw

Our first  spring visit to Summer Lake was this week. It’s not much later than normal, but this has been anything but a typical wiinter/spring transition. 

Regardless, it’s a great half-day drive.

Lord of the reeds  .  .  .  Yellow-headed Blackbird

Oregon is a premier birding state, not because of a single site, but because there is such a diversity of habitats.

Coastal rainforests, mountain meadows, and sagebrush steppe all situated on the Pacific Flyway. 

How do they manage that perch? Red-winged Blackbird

Central Oregon is on the northern edge of the Great Basin and offers a number of alkali marshlands as ideal birding sites.

Pair of Northern Shovelers

Most people think of Malheur National Wildlife Refuge when you mention birding the high desert. And while that’s a massive reserve, at 187,000 acres, it’s not our top pick.

Perhaps the more common song in the marshes  .  .  .  Red-winged Blackbird

The Summer Lake Refuge has about 29 thousand acres and an 8 mile loop road skirts around the central marsh ponds.

This narrow gravel track offers up excellent access to viewing areas right from one’s car.

Black-necked Stilt

As suspected, there wasn’t a great number of birds  .  .  .  groups of waterfowl and some shorebirds. JQ grabbed images of most of them.

It was a perfect spring day, mosquitos were at a minimum so we could enjoy a tailgate lunch and tour with the windows open. 

There are bound to be a couple more trips to the Summer Lake, as well as Abert Lake and points east.

Hopefully  .  .  .  before the real heat of summer starts to bake the sagebrush steppe.