Yolo Audubon Society

Burrowing owl

    Panoche Valley

    Field Trip

  • Date: 03/03/2012
  • Time: 06:00:00 AM
  • Winter raptors and sparrows are some of the
    birds that we will be looking for on this trip. This
    area is particularly good for Prairie Falcon and Golden
    Eagle. Merlin is less common, but also possible. Some
    of the specialty birds that we might see include Greater
    Roadrunner, Costa’s Hummingbird, Cassin’s Kingbird,
    Chukar and Mountain Plover.

    Mercey Hot Springs hosts a wintering population of
    Long-eared Owls and we will stop there to look for them.
    Please note that there is a $5/person fee to go into
    the resort and observe the owls.

    We will meet at 6:00 AM at the Park-N-Ride lot by the Ikeda
    Market (off of the Mace Boulevard Exit from I-80). We will
    plan to be back in Davis between 7:00 and 8:00 PM. Please
    bring lunch, plenty of liquids and be sure to dress in layers
    (be prepared for possible rain and a full day of birding). A
    major storm will cancel this trip.

    Please contact the leader, Kevin Guse, for more information
    (916-514-0685, harpy12@comcast.net).

    Long-earred Owl at Mercey Hot Springs, by Kevin Guse

    Prairie Falcon by the roadside Panoche Valley, by Sami LaRocca

    **************************TRIP HIGHLIGHTS**********************

    Panoche Valley

    We enjoyed an early morning fly out of Greater White-fronted Geese and Sandhill Cranes standing eerily in the ground fog enroute along I-5.
    During the day in Panoche Valley we enjoyed the following highlights:
    Golden Eagles ( 5 different individuals, including one adult)
    Ferruginous Hawk (3 different individuals)
    Prairie Falcon (3 different individuals)
    Long-eared Owls (17+ at Mercey Hot Springs)
    Rock Wren (3 different individuals)
    Greater Roadrunner (3 different individuals)
    Tricolored Blackbird (flock of 400-500 individuals on Panoche road)
    Mountain Bluebird (6-8 individuals on Panoche Road)
    Vesper Sparrow (1 individual)
    Sage Thrasher (1 individual)
    Cassin’s Kingbird (2 individuals)
    The best sighting of the day for me was an adult Bobcat running across a long field in broad daylight! It stopped to look at us then disappeared down a ravine.

    Participants:11
    Total species: 61

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Yolo Audubon Society
P.O. Box 886
Davis, CA 95617

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