Tag: Swallow-tailed Kite

Swallow-tailed Kite in LA County

Without binoculars or a camera, the views can be underwhelming

A Swallow-Tailed Kite in LA County

I just returned from a 10-day trip to Guatemala (tropical birds!). I was starting to put together some posts about the places I visited and the birds I saw. But before I could finish one, a beautiful Swallow-tailed Kite showed up in LA County. The bird was first seen on Tuesday, near Long Beach, at Ken Malloy Harbor Regional Park. I flew in on Tuesday on a red-eye from Guatemala City, wasn’t watching the alerts, and didn’t hear about the sighting until Tuesday evening. The bird wasn’t refound until today (Sunday). Just as I started a volunteer shift at the Natural History Museum, news went out that the bird was back. It was reported off and on all afternoon. As soon as my shift ended at 4pm, I took off for Long Beach.

Breaking the #1 rule and guiding principle of this blog, I went without binoculars (or my birding camera). Home was too far out of the way. Luckily, this was a big enough raptor that I figured I could see it with my naked eyes if it was there. Also, there would be 20 birders around to help me find it. Close photos of the bird perched in a tree went out during my drive. But before I could get there, the bird flew north and out of view. Rather than walking around a lake to where all the birders were, I set up in a spot with a pretty sweeping view to the north. A couple other birders showed up, and we scanned the sky.

About 20 minutes after I arrived, one of the birders near me got the Swallow-tailed Kite in his binoculars. It was distant, but I could see the bird lazily soaring with my naked eyes. He kindly handed over his binoculars for a better view. Another birder allowed me to check it out through a spotting scope. It was a beautiful bird, with contrasting black-and-white underwing pattern, a slaty-gray back with dark shoulders, and a ridiculously long and swallow-tailed tail. I’d seen a couple before in Costa Rica, but this was a new bird for me in the USA. It turns out to be only the second LA County record (the first was a single sighting last summer), and just the 3rd (or 4th or 5th) California record. It’s possible this same bird has been seen in Ventura and San Diego counties in the past month.

Swallow-tailed Kites are regulars in Florida and along the Gulf coast. Their range extends to the Caribbean, Central America, and south all the way to Argentina. They feed on insects caught on the wing, and lizards, snakes, frogs, and small birds. They soar buoyantly, infrequently flapping their wings. 

On my way out, I stopped at the northern end of the lake where the bird had been flying, to see if I might get a cellphone photo. To my delight, after a few minutes, the bird swooped almost directly overhead, close enough for an identifiable shot with my phone.

Costa Rica (2018) #2 – Birding Dominical: Toucans, Hawks, Kites, and Vultures

Yellow-throated Toucan Dominical Costa Rica

Yellow-throated Toucans were regular visitors to the property

Birding Dominical: The Big Birds

Because the birding was so unbelievable where we stayed (I tallied 95 species on the property in a week, and dozens more I couldn’t identify), I’m going to break up the recap into several posts. But first, a few words about our amazing home for the week. The property is called Selva Escondida. It sits between the towns of Dominical and Uvita on a steep slope about 1,200 feet above the Pacific Ocean. The accommodations are known as Villa Chill.  It has 8 bedrooms splits between a main house (with a pool) and two small guesthouses. There were 15 of us staying together, so we needed all the rooms. It’s not cheap, and I think you have to rent the whole thing, so small groups and budget birders will need to look elsewhere. Any place in the area would be great, frankly. But this place had 250 acres of diverse habitat, laced with a couple of roads and a few miles of hiking trails. For a birder, it was nearly heaven.

Dominical Villa

The balcony in Dominical – great for spotting soaring birds

Of the 95 species I identified on the property, a lot of them were big birds. I saw 3 species of vultures (King, Black, Turkey), 4 species of kite (Double-toothed, Swallow-tailed, Gray-headed, Hook-billed), 2 species of hawks (Roadside and Broad-winged), a Crested Caracara, and whatever a Hawk-Eagle is (Black Hawk-Eagle).  EBird says Double-toothed Kites are frequently seen soaring “with wings bowed down, tail closed, and puffy white feathering visible under the base of the tail—a distinctive combination of features.” That’s exactly the picture I got! It also says they are rarely seen perched, but I managed to photograph one perched on the property. 

Double-toothed Kite Dominical Costa Rica

A Double-toothed Kite made a low fly-by

I came to suspect that the Roadside Hawks I kept seeing were actually a single bird that resided on the property. On multiple morning walks, I found it standing on the same rock. Each time, at first glance, I thought the rope it was standing on was a snake. Broad-winged Hawks were more often hidden in the branches of forest-edge trees.

At any moment of the day, if you could peel your eyes away from the small birds flitting around the bushes and trees and look up, you were bound to see something soaring by.  Three days in a row a Black Hawk-Eagle circled overhead, screeching like an Osprey. I was stoked to see this bird, but would have loved a closer view. They have crest feathers on their head, and look like they’re wearing striped leg warmers. Twice a King Vulture wandered past.  The Swallow-tailed Kites stayed over the ridge, but close enough to make out their awesome tails. And I lucked into my lone look ever at Wood Storks when a group of 9 went by headed south.

Of the massively-billed birds, I saw Yellow-throated Toucan (daily) and Fiery-billed Aracari (two disappointingly fleeting views). The toucans are elegant fliers, who swoop up to their landing spot. When they weren’t hopping from branch to branch gobbling up fruit, they were conspicuously perched and calling loudly.

This hut on the slope above the property was also great for hawkwatching and chilling

There were big birds who weren’t soaring above, too. During my wandering, I stumbled into Great Tinamou, Crested Guan, Great Currasow, and Gray-headed Chachalaca.  It’s always odd to see such large creatures in the trees, but that’s always where the Crested Guan and Chachalaca were. Because of their size and the way they shake the branches, you often think at first that they are monkeys.

Great Currasow Dominical Costa Rica

This pair of Great Currasow wandered the property

Crested Guan Dominical Costa Rica

Crested Guan somehow move through the canopy pretty skillfully

A Bare-throated Tiger Heron lurked along a creek. In the lower right of the photo you can see an adult Basilisk, also known as the Jesus Christ Lizard, for its ability to run on water. While my oldest son isn’t as in to birding as he used to, the possibility of finding Basilisks got him to accompany me on several 6:00am walks (to this father’s great delight).

Bare-throated Tiger Heron Dominical Costa Rica