Archive for November, 2005

Nov 25 2005

Posted by CyberCelt under Uncategorized

Christmas in San Antonio Starts Tomorrow 11/25/05

Christmas in San Antonio

Start your Christmas in Texas by viewing the Alamo Plaza Christmas Tree Lighting Ceremony! Live entertainment and visits from Santa begin at 530 pm and the huge Christmas tree is lit at 625 PM.

Be on the River Walk at 7 PM when officials throw the switch to light over 122,000 lights in the trees, reflecting the water, and lighting the River Walk.

When the lights come on at 7 PM, the Holiday River Parade begins! You will see some of the most spectacularly illuminated parade floats, decorated with celebrities, bands and lavishly costumed participants.

For more information, please call the Paseo del Rio Association of San Antonio, TX (210) 227-4262

The Sights and Sounds of Christmas in San Marcos will be covered next post. You will not want to miss that either.


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Nov 20 2005

Posted by CyberCelt under Uncategorized

Best Birding at Texas State Parks

Lost Maples State Park, located in the Hill Country, is home to golden-cheeked warblers, blackcapped vireos and other songbirds. Red-tailed hawks and green kingfishers compete with the colorful foliage of maples in the fall.

In the Piney Woods region, journey to Huntsville State Park in the spring to view a variety of wood-warblers, buntings, tanagers and orioles migrating to summer breeding grounds. Other birds that visit the park include pileated and red-headed woodpeckers. The Kentucky prothonotaries, yellow-throated warblers and American redstarts also add their brilliant colors to the colorful palette here.

Along the Gulf Coast, visit Galveston Island State Park to view American white and brown pelicans as well as various gull, tern and black skimmer. During the winter, look for merlins and peregrine falcons. Frigatebirds visit Galveston typically in late summer and fall. In the spring, watch for tricolored herons, white ibis, black-bellied whistling ducks and blue-winged teals.

Also located in the Gulf coast region just southwest of Houston on the Brazos River, is Brazos Bend State Park. Thousands of mallards, pintails, teals and wood ducks take refuge during the winter. Birders have recorded more than 230 species in the park, including anhingas, roseate spoonbills, king rails, pied-billed grebes, white and white-faced ibis, and snowy and great egrets. There are also little blue, great blue, tricolored and green herons as well as black-crowned and yellow-crowned night herons.

Located near the geographical center of Texas, Lake Brownwood State Park is home to scissor-tailed flycatchers, canyon wrens and several species of hummingbirds. During the winter, birders flock to Palo Duro Canyon State Park to see golden eagles, prairie falcons and mountain bluebirds. Lucky birders can sometimes find a northern shrike or a bohemian waxwing in winter. Swainson’s hawk, rock wrens, canyon wrens and golden-crowned kinglets also visit these majestic canyon lands.

Stark desert vistas compete with the green rolling hills of Davis Mountains State Park, located in the Chihuahuan Desert of the Big Bend region. This is home to the largest number of hummingbird species in Texas. The higher elevations host many species of rare birds such as flammulated owls, band-tailed pigeons, nesting whippoorwills, Williamson’s sapsuckers, magnificent and blue-throated hummingbirds, gray and cordilleran flycatchers, violet-green swallows, Steller jays, house wrens, hermit thrushes, and Hutton’s and warbling vireo.

Observe the seasonal change of birds in Texas this year!

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Nov 18 2005

Posted by CyberCelt under Uncategorized

Pink Flamingo Spotted on Texas Coast

Just a birding report. A friend of mine was at Goose Island State Park this week. He saw a Pink Flamingo. Not a Roseate Spoonbill, but a Flamingo! I also saw that others had seen it on the birding hotline.

Get your life list and your binoculars and see a Flamingo in the wild.

You just never know what you might see in Texas, especially along the coast.

Best birding,

Eileen

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Nov 18 2005

Posted by CyberCelt under Uncategorized

World Birding Center in Texas

The World Birding Center is located in Mission, Texas on the border with Mexico. Here you will spot birds found nowhere else in the United States. Year-round avian residents of the World Birding Center are least grebes, neotropic cormorants, plain chachalacas, white-tipped doves, pauraques, great kiskadees, long and curved-billed thrashers, green jays, tropical parulas, Altamira orioles and olive sparrows.

Information on all the birds found in Bentsen-RGV SP, including bird calls.

The 760-acre World Birding Center, also known as the Bentsen-Rio Grande Valley State Park, together with over 1,700 acres of adjoining federal refuge land, promises year-round nature adventures in the richest birding area north of the Mexican border.

Article on Birding in Bentsen-RBV SP by seasons.

Not one place, but nine unique locations, each with its own attractions for the first-time visitor or expert birder. Not one season, but all seasons, as more than 500 different bird species make this a not-to-be-missed nature destination.

  • 4 nature trails ranging in length from 1/4 mile to 2 miles
  • 210-foot, 2-story high, accessible Hawk Observation Tower
  • 2 observation decks
  • 2 accessible bird blinds
  • primitive camping sites (by reservation)
  • rest areas
  • picnic sites with tables
  • exhibit hall
  • park store
  • coffee bar
  • meeting room (available for rental)
  • catering kitchen
  • bike rentals (1, 2 and 4 seat bikes)

Access within the park is by foot, bike and tram only.

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Nov 12 2005

Posted by CyberCelt under Uncategorized

April 2006: 10th Annual Great Texas Birding Classic

Texas Parks and Wildlife sponsers the Great Texas Birding Classic. During this weeklong event, birders from around the globe converge on the Texas coast for fun and friendly team birding.

The Great Texas Birding Classic started in April of 1997, and has grown tremendously every year. Competition for the Conservation Cash Grand Prize has been fast and furious, and so far $150,000 has been donated directly to avian habitat conservation on the Texas coast. With each year we have more teams competing, a larger variety of sponsors coming on board, and an abundance of bird species seen.

Tenth Annual Great Texas Birding Classic
Saturday, April 22 - Sunday, April 30, 2006
Sectional order: Central, Upper and Lower coasts

If you want to plan your trip next Spring check out Birding Trail Maps Available for Sale.

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