Introduction


COVID

I booked this trip for March 2020 but I had to cancel due to the Covid. So, I will do it in 2023 instead.

I was spending time on Youtube watching bird videos. I discovered a Mark Smith's Youtube channel I discovered some gorgeous videos and there was a link to his web page https://photoworkshopsandtours.com

I discovered that he was running photo tours and I booked 2 different tours and I booked 3 of each

• ROSEATE SPOONBILL PHOTOGRAPHY WORKSHOP 2020
• FLORIDA DIVING AND FEEDING OSPREY PHOTOGRAPHY WORKSHOP


I was told by the tour organizer that the best lens would be a minimum 600mm so I cancelled the trips. I looked around for other tours and Guides in South Florida, no answers so I wanted to cancel Florida. But I had come to learn a lot about the Everglades during my search on internet and it is for sure looking like an exciting birding destination.

So I decided to go to Florida, rent a car and drive around Everglades by myself.

My original plan was to go birding in New York and at Niagara Falls after Florida. And as to find a Birding Guide in Florida was hard, impossible. But I found several Gides in Colorado. And Californias sounds very exciting.

Colorado, the people seem very friendly and I was offered a lot of help and I found a Guide. Canada, and I found a Guide at Birdingpal for the area around Peterborough NW of Toronto.

So I will arrive to Miami, pick up my rented car and drive to Florida City. At least on the map it looks to be as far south you can come before Florida turns in to wilderness. A perfect place to start my daily bird watching adventures.

So my bird watching holiday will look like this: Florida - Colorado - Canada - New York and then back home. And you will be able to find out what birds I have seen just by follow the links below.

My plans were made in 2019

So I am off three years later, the Guide I had found in Peterborough, Canada is no longer available.

I wanted to cancel Peterborough but I decided to go anyway. I will rent a car for my stay in Canada so I can go check out the birding areas around Peterborough.

And also, the coast line between Peterborough and Toronto when going back south to Toronto.

I was in contact with a birding company in San Francisco, but now they are not available as they are going on a tour to Texas, A South Texas Adventure

I asked if they had any seats and I booked this tour. And I will fly via San Francisco where I will rent a car. Just stop for three days to look for Humming birds before going to Texas.

So, my UPDATED bird watching holiday will look like this: Florida - Colorado - San Francisco - Texas - Canada - New York and then back home.


To skip the information and to go straight to the TRIP REPORT click HERE


VISA

Travel.State.Gov

Please visit https://travel.state.gov/content/travel/en/us-visas/tourism-visit/visitor.html to see if you need a VISA. Maybe you are citizens of participating in the Visa Waiver Program (VWP) Then you may be eligible to visit the United States without a visa. Visits must be 90 days or less, and travellers must meet all requirements.

Electronic System for Travel Authorization

Travelers must have a valid Electronic System for Travel approval prior to travel and meet all requirements explained below.

In order to travel without a visa on the VWP, you must have authorization through the Electronic System for Travel Authorization (ESTA) prior to boarding a U.S. bound air or sea carrier. ESTA is a web-based system operated by U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) to determine eligibility to travel under the VWP to the United States for tourism or business. Visit the ESTA webpage on the CBP website for more information.

Department of Homeland Security

WHAT DO I NEED TO APPLY?

• Valid passport(s) from a Visa Waiver Program country. ( List of Visa Waiver Countries )

• Traveller’s valid email address.

• Traveller’s home address and phone number.

• Traveller’s emergency point of contact phone and email.

Payment method:
Fee for application is $14.00 USD.
Valid payment methods include MasterCard, VISA, American Express, Discover (JCB or Diners Club only), and PayPal.


Flights

I had to book a couple of tickets to get me where I wanted


Singapore Airlines SQ 983
Bangkok Intl           -         Singapore Intl
24March2020 20:00          24March2020 20:30



Singapore Airlines SQ 22
Singapore Intl           -         New York, Newark Intl
25March2020 00:40            25March2020 06:30



United Airlines flight UA1710
New York, Newark Intl       -       Miami Intl
25March2020 11:30                  25March2020 14:33



United Airlines flight UA5489/ UA1493 via Houston
Miami Intl           -         Denver Intl
02Apr2020 08:45          02Apr2020 14:15



United Airlines flight UA5489
Denver Intl          -          Toronto Intl
08Apr2020 09:45            08Apr2020 15:10


United Airlines UA4457
Toronto Intl          -          New York/ Newark
20Apr2020 07:18            20Apr2020 08:54



Singapore Airlines SQ 21
New York, Newark Intl         -        Singapore Intl
23April2020 10:25                         24April2020 17:10



Singapore Airlines SQ 971
Singapore Intl          -         Bangkok Intl
24April2020 18:30              24April2020 20:00



Land transportation

• AOT Limousine between my home and Bangkok International Airport

AOT Limousine

I recommend the AOT or any other taxi service if you are leaving early morning. The price per trip is 1200 Baht comparing to around 220 Baht + about 80 Baht road toll. But the taxi can easily be 1000 baht if you´re getting desperate when not finding a taxi.

Early morning flight and it can be a hassle to find a taxi that want to take you to the airport so I book AOT and the car wait for me outside my apartment.

Leaving Suvarnabhumi and AOT have desks in the luggage claim area, where I use to book my car while waiting for my luggage. There are also desks just outside the custom and you cannot miss them.




• I will take a taxi from Corpus Christi Airport to the hotel. The rest of the trip will be with Nature Trip

Lyft

I booked a car using my LYFT taxi app. This is a app that I have used in several places in USA and it looks to be the #1 taxi app in USA, at least now 2023.

You can use Lyft in USA and Canada. They say that UBER is a little bit more expensive but maybe worth trying. I had problem with Lyft a couple of times. GPS position was not correct so when I ooked a car for the hotel, both me and the Driver had the same destination.

But we arrived to a totaly different adress. And drivers that came to the wrong pick-up point. Not speaking English etc. But most of the time it was working well and I went to several birding hotspots using Lyft when I did not have a rented car.

Lyft


Accommodations

• Executive Residency by Best Western Corpus Christi


Weather / climate

Corpus Christi - Climate & Temperature
Pictures from www.climatemps.com

Corpus Christi - Climate & Temperature - Click picture for full size picture
Pictures from www.climatemps.com

Weather & Climate: April in South Texas is generally very pleasant but naturally temperatures and weather vary a good bit from year to year. Severe weather is unusual in April but thunderstorms may pop up quickly and dissipate just as quickly. Temperatures typically vary from lows in the 50’s F to highs in the 80’s F and generally rise as one gets further from the coast. It is not unusual for the Upper Valley to reach the high 90s Fahrenheit by mid-April.

Equipment

Canon 5D Mk. III and Canon 5D Mk. IV
Canon EF 28-300/3,5-5,6 L IS USM
Canon EF 70-200/2,8L IS II USM
Canon EF 100-400mm f/4.5-5.6L IS II USM lens
Canon Speedlite 600EXII-RT flash
Canon PowerShot G7X Mark II
Panasonic HC-W585 video camera

Sound recorder
ZOOM H5 Handy Recorder


References/Resources


Suggested Reading for “A South Texas Adventure”
• As a general bird field guide for this trip we recommend either:
• National Audubon Society: The Sibley Guide to Birds, 2nd edition, Sibley, David Allen, Doubleday, 2015.
• Field Guide to the Birds of North America: 7th edition, The National Geographic Society, 2017
.

You may also want to peruse or bring some of the following guides, several of which will be made available during the tour by your guides:
• Exploring the Great Texas Coastal Birding Trail, White, Mel, Globe Pequot Press, 2004
• A Birder's Guide to the Texas Coast, 5th edition, Cooksey, Mel and Weeks, Ron. American Birding Association, 2006.
• A Birder's Guide to the Rio Grande Valley, Mark W. Lockwood and McKinney, William B., American Birding Association, 2018.
• A Birder's Guide to the Texas Coast, Holt, Harold Lane/ American Birding Association, 1993.
• Butterflies of the Lower Rio Grande Valley, Wauer, Roland H., Big Earth Publishing, 2004.
• Plants of Deep South Texas, Richardson, Alfred and King, Ken, Texas A&M University Press, 2011
• Texas Wildflowers: A Field Guide, Loughmiller, Miller & Campbell, University of Texas Press, 2018.
• Wildflowers of the Texas Hill Country, Enquist, Marshall, Lone Star Botanical, 1989.


+++++++++++++

ebird - Find birding hotspots with bird checklists from all over the world

Avibase - is an extensive database information system about all birds of the world, containing over 25 million records about 10,000 species and 22,000 subspecies of birds, including distribution information for 12,000 regions, taxonomy, synonyms in several languages

Cloudbirders - Read birding trip reports from all over the world

Fatbirder - Linking birders worldwide... Wildlife Travellers see their sister site: WAND


Fatbirder is a fantastic web page with information from, I think every country in the world. My first stop when I plan for my bird watching trips. There is information about locations and guides, well, pretty much everything you need to know. Sometimes this is the only place I need to visit to plan my trip.

BirdingPal - find a birding Guide around the world

BirdingPal


And the web page you cannot live without. I have been around the world looking for birds. I usually have a Guide, but sometimes it is not possible to find a Guide. So, well, I have lost count on how many times I have had help to ID birds at BirdForum. Joining this forum have been very very good for my bird watching experience.

www.birdforum.net

ClimaTemps.com is the place to learn about the worlds climates with more than 4000 locations documented. Each aspect of the climate is represented using colour enhanced tables and professional graphs so that data can easily be compared by switching between locations in different tabs in your browser.

National Park Service

Since 1916, the National Park Service has been entrusted with the care of our national parks. With the help of volunteers and partners, we safeguard these special places and share their stories with more than 330 million visitors every year.

National Park Service - WOW !! And I mean WOW !! This is something I have not seen since New Zealand. What a page! All about the National Parks in USA. Chose a state from a map and a list of the National Parks are coming up. I clicked on Colorado and I had so much information about the visitor centres, trails and just about everything.

AUDABON - Protecting waterbird populations has been part of Audubon’s mission even before the official establishment of the National Audubon Society. Outrage over the slaughter of millions of waterbirds, particularly egrets and other waders, for the millinery trade led to the foundation, by Harriet Hemenway and Minna B. Hall, of the Massachusetts Audubon Society in 1896.

By 1898, state-level Audubon Societies had been established in Pennsylvania, New York, New Hampshire, Illinois, Maine, Wisconsin, New Jersey, Rhode Island, Connecticut, the District of Columbia, Ohio, Indiana, Tennessee, Minnesota, Texas, and California.

In 1900, Audubon member Frank M. Chapman launched the first Christmas Bird Count – Audubon’s all-volunteer holiday census of early-winter bird populations – as an alternative to the traditional Christmas “Side Hunt,” in which hunters competed to kill as many birds (and mammals) as possible.


This is a great web page! A great rescourse for bird watchers with a lot of information and guides.

Outside your door, on your way to work, at the beach—birds are everywhere. Whether you're a beginner looking for your first pair of binoculars or an experienced birder in search of identification tips, we have it all here for you. So go on, start exploring.



To reach the BIRDING you just choose GET OUTSIDE from the drop menu. Choose BIRDING and you reach the page with the below topics to choose from:

• How to Start Birding
• What You Need
• Identifying Birds
• In the Field
• Backyard Birding
• The Birdist’s Rules of Birding

Visit their Birding the United States - A state-by-state guide to the best birding hotspots around the country . To reach the interactive map you just choose GET OUTSIDE from the drop menu. Choose TRAVEL and choose a state on the interactive map. I get a list of HOT SPOTS that I can click on for more information.

Bird Watcher's Digest

Bird Watcher's Digest - A birding magazine with an interesting web page. Click the link EXPLORE - BIRDING BY REGION - then choose a state for information about pretty much everything you can wish for.

National Geographic Field Guide to the Birds of North America- National Geographic Field Guide to the Birds of North America, Sixth Edition is a great guide. In my review of the fifth edition I qualified my recommendation, especially for owners of a prior edition. Not so with the sixth – it belongs in every birder’s library! From beginner to expert, it will be useful to any birder. And for those interested in geographic variation, it is a must."
– Grant McCreary (29-12-2011), read the full review at The Birder's Library


National Geographic Field Guide to the Birds of North America
National Geographic Field Guide to the Birds of North America



Places to visit


A South Texas Adventure - A ten day Nature Trip & birding tour of Texas: The Texas Gulf Coast and Lower Rio Grande Valley including Mustang Island, South Padre Island, Laguna Atascosa, Sabal Palm Sanctuary, Santa Ana National Wildlife Refuge, Bentsen State Park, Estero Llano Grande and the King Ranch.

See full program by clicking HERE

Nature Trip


Bird checklist

I never use any bird lists, but since I try to make it in to Cloudbirders . A very helpful site when planning your birding trips. But they ask for a bird checklist, and if I use their service, of course I want to contribute as well. My two first bird watching trip reports was rejected by Cloudbirders.

So I started to take ideas from the reports I found on Cloudbirders. So I have started to use bird lists, eBird generate one for me and I can post it on Cloudbirders. I will post my birds on eBird and on my different “BIRDS THAT I HAVE OBSERVED” pages.

Check lists can come in handy to find out the local name of the bird etc. And Avibase have a list with pictures and sounds, excellent!

So I will post bird checklists here and if my Guides provide me with checklists I will also post them here.




New York bird checklist from Avibase, click HERE

Avibase is providing you with bird checklists from all over the world. And I´m impressed by their web page. Select country and area and you get the bird checklist. Like the PDF files I got from Avibase on the links above. You also get the checklist with pictures and sounds.

The best part is that you get the local names of the birds and the online checklist gives the names in English plus the language you have selected. But it seems like the PDF cannot handle some alphabet.

For example the Japanese language so it is blank in the PDF checklist. But it worked excellent with Ethiopian. But you get them in the local language on the online version.


Bird list

See My eBird checklists and the DAY TO DAY report in the itinerary below.

And you can visit my list of “ Birds I have seen in North America


eBird

eBird Life List

I have decided to use the eBird Life List function instead of doing my own time-consuming Life List. I discovered eBird Trip Report in April 2023 during my bird watching in North America, a new function that I now do for my bird watching trips.

And as this working beautifully I decided to use their Life List function and I will save hundreds of hours doing my own lists.

Pictures and location available by clicking the links in the pdf document. If you are using eBird you should be familiar with how it works.



My eBird checklists can be found HERE

Hot tips

• if you don't rent a car, ou can hire car with driver using a taxi app. Agree the hourly price with the driver.


DAY BY DAY reports

Click on the below links for daily bird watching reports:

Day 1: Sunday, April 16 – Travel to Corpus Christi.
Meeting Point: Corpus Christi International Airport
Arrive in time for pre-arranged transport to the hotel and a group welcome dinner. For those that arrive in the morning or afternoon there is good birding near the hotel. Depending on airport schedules there are many options along the shore of the Laguna Madre or one of the nearby Oak Mots.

I will explore some of the eBird hotspots in the area.

Day 2: Monday, April 17 – Mustang Island, Port Aransas and (northern) South Padre Island.

Day 3: Tuesday, April 18 - Corpus Christi to South Padre Island.

Day 4: Wednesday, April 19 - SPI, Laguna Atascosa.

Day 5: Thursday, April 20 - Rio de Los Palmas, Boca Chica, SPI.

Day 6: Friday, April 21 - Upriver Rio & Estero Llano Grande.

Day 7: Saturday, April 22 - Santa Ana National Wildlife Refuge.

Day 8: Sunday, April 23 - Bentsen State Park & Hugh Ramsey Nature Park.

Day 9: Monday, April 24 - King Ranch.

Day 10: Tuesday, April 25 Corpus Christi - Flying to Toronto, Canada.




eBird

Full Texas eBird Trip Report

Since April 2023 eBird offer a new feature, to create Trip Reports. At least this is when I first heard of this feature and I have decided to make the eBird Trip Reports instead of my list of OBSERVED birds.

And of course, this also means that I will HAVE TO go back and do the same for my old birding adventures, WHEN I HAVE THE TIME!

Today's Trip Report: Southern Texas bird watching tour with Nature Trip - 15 to 25 April 2023 | Click HERE

Download | PDF

Lifers
Icons for lifers used in the eBird trip reports

eBird Species lifer:First time that someone observes a species in their life

eBird Photo lifer:First time that someone photographs a species in their life

eBird Audio lifer:First time that someone audio records a species in their life

Exotic species
Exotic species flags differentiate locally introduced species from native species.

eBird Naturalized:Exotic population is self-sustaining, breeding in the wild, persisting for many years, and not maintained through ongoing releases (including vagrants from Naturalized populations). These count in official eBird totals and, where applicable, have been accepted by regional bird records committee(s).

eBird Provisional:Either: 1)member of exotic population that is breeding in the wild, self-propagating, and has persisted for multiple years, but not yet Naturalized; 2)rarity of uncertain provenance, with natural vagrancy or captive provenance both considered plausible.

When applicable, eBird generally defers to bird records committees for records formally considered to be of "uncertain provenance". Provisional species count in official eBird totals.

eBird Escapee:Exotic species known or suspected to be escaped or released, including those that have
bred but don't yet fulfill the criteria for Provisional. Escapee exotics do not count in official eBird totals.

Exotic species
Exotic species flags differentiate locally introduced species from native species.

eBird Naturalized:Exotic population is self-sustaining, breeding in the wild, persisting for many years, and not maintained through ongoing releases (including vagrants from Naturalized populations). These count in official eBird totals and, where applicable, have been accepted by regional bird records committee(s).

eBird Provisional:Either: 1)member of exotic population that is breeding in the wild, self-propagating, and has persisted for multiple years, but not yet Naturalized; 2)rarity of uncertain provenance, with natural vagrancy or captive provenance both considered plausible.

When applicable, eBird generally defers to bird records committees for records formally considered to be of "uncertain provenance". Provisional species count in official eBird totals.

eBird Escapee:Exotic species known or suspected to be escaped or released, including those that have
bred but don't yet fulfill the criteria for Provisional. Escapee exotics do not count in official eBird totals.






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