Birders
Related: About this forumScissor-tailed flycatchers are the Texas bird of paradise
It was early April and I was camping near Roma, Texas, at a small campground near the Rio Grande. Nestled in the southern Texas Plains just a few minutes drive from the Mexican border, I hadnt decided on how long I intended to stay before making my trip northward to the Pecos River and Big Bend, two must-see stops on my list as I traveled through Texas along the border.
While visiting this area, I was fortunate enough to see the first wave of scissor-tailed flycatchers come through. I remember the day perfectly. It was golden hour and the sky and fields had a beautiful hue. It had been almost 10 years since I had seen my last scissortail, and I wasnt expecting to see it again at that particular moment
but there it was, perched in an isolated tree that grew along the gravel entry road to the campground. Unmistakable. Breathtakingly elegant. The scissor-tailed flycatchers had arrived!
The next morning, I took my camera out to try to find the bird again. To my luck, I only had to walk about thirty feet from where my camp was set up to find one. The flycatcher was perched on the outer parts of a branch that extended from the lone tree that was growing in the open grassy field. It was diligently watching and waiting to grab its insectivorous breakfast from the grasses, a textbook description of their foraging behavior and habitat. Meeting this bird again after all of these years was like catching up with a long lost friend. It was almost like no time had passed at all.
Back in 2009, I was still in Enid, Oklahoma. As a young birder of the northeast, I had only ever listened in wonder to the stories other birdwatchers would tell me about the flycatchers exaggerated long tail and elegant beauty. It was late summer in Enid, and the birds were wrapping up their breeding season and getting ready to move southward and they were doing it in large flocks. Dozens were seen in flight as Id drive through town. It wasnt till later that I learned that these flycatchers, along with other similar species such as the fork-tailed flycatcher, will get together in large groups during the spring and fall to embark on their southward migration.
https://thefacts.com/living/article_5bd6fc28-aa43-53c4-87af-55f2b979d6d2.html
AllaN01Bear
(23,072 posts)cool bird. how in the heck did they evolve that way.?
https://www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/Scissor-tailed_Flycatcher/overview
https://www.google.com/search?q=Scissor-tailed+flycatchers&hl=en&gbv=2&source=lnms&tbm=vid&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwj1nu2z2tD6AhVnZTABHdWXALcQ_AUICCgD
thanks for sharing.
MuseRider
(34,375 posts)They were everywhere here in NE Kansas when you got out of town. I had a 10 mile drive to my farm before we moved out here and I had to go there twice a day and I would count them just for fun. I would see them all up and down the roads but it has been at least 20 years since I have seen one. I am happy to know they are in OK. and South.
WhiteTara
(30,178 posts)I love seeing them too. So elegant.