
Cartoon by Artanuk
Mam and I met each other over 35 years ago and have been great friends ever since. We may not see each other as often as we did when we lived in the same little Connecticut town, but we’re always able to pick up where we left off, as if we’d seen each other only the day before.
I was delighted when Mam said she could come to Arizona for a week. It’s been a year and a half since our last meeting, and we had much to catch up on. Of course I wanted her to have a special time, so we planned many activities.
The thing about Mam is that she’s a birdwatcher. It’s a hobby I’ve never cottoned too, being both too impatient and too poorly-sighted to make a success of it. Oh look! another little brown and yellow bird. It must be a… God only knows what!
But putting aside fears of my limitations, we boldly charted a course for Sierra Vista, about three and a half hours southeast of where we live. It’s an odd, meandering kind of town, not quite city, not quite town. Incorporated only in 1956,we surmised it sprang to life around the big military base there, Fort Huachuca. It has three main advantages: many places to stay overnight; many places to eat; proximity to many A-1 birding sights, including the two we visited.
First we went to San Pedro Riparian Conservation Area. Here is what I saw:
But THIS is what Mam saw!
Oh well.
Undaunted we stumped off in the peculiar gait of birdwatchers: step, step, step, pause, cock head and listen, make slight swishing noise between teeth to encourage invisible bird, decide it was the wind we heard, step, step, step.
There was something strange going on with the light and the gray/white trees around the San Pedro River. I haven’t fiddled with this picture at all, this really is what it looked like that day (better if you click on it to enlarge).
Not too far along in our walk we were both rewarded with a vermilion flycatcher. Mam had seen one before, but as far as I know I never had, so it was quite exciting. Well, it was quite interesting. Well, it was very pretty.
Mam, however, continued to put me to shame. When I saw this:
She saw this:
and when she continued to see this:
my attention was completely diverted by this:
The most humiliating of all was when we returned to our starting point. While Mam got to glory in the sight of this:
all I got to see was this:
The next day, fed and rested, we took ourselves off to nearby Ramsay Canyon which is lovingly maintained by the Nature Conservancy. The docents, Mr. and Mrs. Sandy, were informative and delightful. It was a chilly, very windy day, and we were a bit early for the birds, both for the day and the season. The much vaunted hummingbirds were still hanging out in warmer climes. We also learned from Mr. and Mrs. S that a deadly trifecta of fire, flood and freezing temperatures the year before had reduced the food for the birds, and hence reduced the number of birds themselves.
As we step, step, stepped through the morning we heard more and more twittering in the forest around us. Alas for us, there were also more and more visitors, which meant more noise and disruption along the trail and less opportunity to see the few birds that were there. Mam did catch sight of one she’d never seen before, though: an orange crowned warbler. I didn’t see that one.
Mam also saw the showy acorn woodpecker:
“Isn’t that a robin??!”
We saw some big birds that look every bit as gorgeous in the woods as they do on the dinner table:
Even I could see this fellow!
As we headed back to the entrance we were entranced to see a pair of deer browsing in the undergrowth.
We might not have seen a great many birds at either birding ‘hot spot,’ but we had a wonderful time being a couple of old friends together enjoying walks in the outdoors in lovely weather.
And I got my revenge on Mam. When I saw this:
and this:
she didn’t see anything at all, because she doesn’t like lizzards and ran away into the house!
















What a good sport to step, step, pause, sigh, in pursuit of a friend’s hobby. Twice! Never would have guessed that you experienced visual problems – that’s a challenge for a photographer that you’ve overcome superbly. You must admit, the birding expeditions seem not to have bored you to the extent some annual garden tours did. Must’ve been the lizards!
Hmmm. I don’t remember being particularly bored during garden tours, though I’ll admit that for me animals always spice up an outing. The great thing about a camera is that it gives you an opportunity to see what you’ve ‘seen.’
Girls after my own heart! What wonderful pix, and what wonderful outings! If you are fascinated by wildlife (I am) and birds in particular, you are in the joyful position of having even the dreariest day enriched by a flutter of wings. It brings a whole new dimension to our surroundings and heightens our awareness that we are not alone, and that there are a myriad of creatures bustling about out there, going about their fascinating little lives!
Truer words were never said. I took a zillion pictures of birds on the golf course the other day… I should send them to you. Amazing the variety of wildlife that lives cheek by jowl with civilization.
Yup. A red bird. I’ve seen one or two of them. I love feeding the birds in winter just to have some activity to watch outside the house, and know a few varieties. In the summer I have spent a lot of time wandering around the yard, head cranked back, searching in vain for the source of a call that apparently emanates from an invisible creature that stops its noise-making the second it might manifest. Bird-watching has its risks, too. I carpool with an avid bird-watcher who, while driving, sometimes spends agonizingly long moments transfixed by the sight of a bird through the car window. So far, so good – no head-ons and he is always dead-on with his bird IDs.
Fortunately I drove, so Mam could stare at the raptors overhead (were they waiting for us to be food??). I love bird-watching, but I did notice that among some of the people we met on our short jaunt there was an air of competition and, in one case, superiority that was a little off-putting. I guess that happens whenever people are more expert than the tyros to whom they’re speaking… but still.
I loved it. I just had the great opportunity to see Mam on her return from AZ and I stayed with her for a night. We are blessed to have such great friendships.
You’re right about that!
What a fun post and what fun you and M.A had!
I, like you, never can find the birds but I love hearing them
Sing and chatter. I think I’ve identified all of 26 birds in my whole, long life and felt like queen each time I was able to do so.
Was one of them a robin?
Thanks for the beautiful pics.
If you ever find time to visit Berkeley, we can show you a grey fox that has
adopted our backyard as his/her [?] home.
Cheers
Oh lovely, a fox. I would dearly love to see/meet him/her. We would see them occasionally in Conn., but more often red ones than grey. They are so graceful and lovely. We’d love to visit Berkeley again, one of the finest places in the world!