I discover a new Heron

    They had not been seen enough in Las Vegas or the entire West to merit listing in area checklists for birds. They are not listed for this area on eBird.com (I tried to include them in a report), nor on the Las Vegas National Wildlife Refuge (LVNWR) checklist of birds that have ever been seen there.

And I use the word “discover” as Columbus” did of the Indies.

 

Fri, 31 July 2015

Br1_150629bIn the last few days I have have had a glimpses in passing of largish birds, some brown, some grayish flying out of the river bottom and heading for the bosque down stream. Then yesterday on my way home I saw in the distance what might be a small brown heron standing on the river bank peering into the water.

Therefore today I was ready with camera ’round my neck, scrutinizing the river banks, looking for my little brown heron(?). Approaching the first school footbridge I spied it on the opposite bank, a small brown, yellow streaked heron walking away from the rio. Click, Click, Click, three images immortalizing his/her being.

Gr1_150634b I scan around for more. Bingo! A grayish one is in the water staring at me. Click, Click, Click, three more images while he leaves the water. Having lost the brown one in the grass, I cross the bridge to get another perspective. Click, Click, a couple more images of the gray one on the bank, one glaring red eye on me as he surveys his fishing territory. “Enough of this!” says he and takes off down river. Shortly thereafter the brown one leaps into the air from the tall, camouflaging grass and follows.

Sun, 02 August 2015
Gr2_150722aWith a timeout for the 100 year anniversary Horse Parade and unsure of what I had seen two days ago, I was back at the river with my camera. I spy a gray one in the river, fishing, oblivious of me. I manage to take a few frames before a jogger spooks him and off it goes followed by another brown one. A short way down the river I photograph another or the same brown one, which was spooked by the dog accompanying me.

With all of my pictures, a couple of books and the Internet I have determined with difficulty that the birds are Yellow-crowned Night-herons. The difficulty is due to the fact that the birds are either juvenile (brown) or immature (gray) with incomplete adult plumage. There have been a three sighting reported by birders on the internet. One aloft at Story Lake and two at Texico Marsh August 2 in Curry Co. I have named the different birds I have photographed: Br(own)1, Gr(ay)1, Gr2 and Br2.