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Memorial Day at Desert Bird List |
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May 25 29, 2007
$755, all-inclusive
from Salt Lake City, Utah
The Deseret Ranch Birding Experience
When we first began conducting bird surveys of the Deseret Ranch eleven years ago, we quickly realized that the ranch was not only home to some of the best birding in Utah, but also had the potential to become one of the finest birding-tour destinations anywhere. Since then, hundreds of birders from across America (including many who have visited several times) have discovered that birding the ranch is like birding in your own, personal national park. At nearly 250,000 acres, Deseret Ranch is Utah’s largest piece of privately-owned property. With its boundaries stretching through five counties in northeastern Utah, the ranch has examples of nearly all of the habitats of the region. The eastern third of the ranch has rolling hills of sagebrush and grass, with extensive areas of wet meadows and marsh, along with many ponds and several large lakes. The western portion of the ranch consists of mountain ridges and valleys, with a mosaic of coniferous forest, aspen woodlands, and meadows. Willows and cottonwoods line the numerous streams. From the tops of the ridges, stunning panoramas of the Wasatch and Uinta Mountains greet the viewer. Deseret Ranch is one of the best examples of holistic ranch management in the west. Under this philosophy, the ranch is managed in order to maintain a healthy ecosystem. Increased biodiversity is actively encouraged. As a result, the ranch abounds with wildlife. Elk, Moose, Deer, Pronghorn, Coyote, Badger, Prairie Dog and Beaver are some of the mammals which can be easily seen. Of course, there are lots of birds on the ranch. Our surveys have found over 270 species of birds on the ranch, with many new species still being added each year. Bird-watching trips to the ranch, which began in 1994, typically record over 120 species on single-day outings. We continue to discover new birding opportunities on the ranch. Birding trips to the ranch follow a free itinerary, where the season and your desires dictate our activities. The typical day features an early breakfast at the hotel followed by a morning outing onto the ranch were we may have a picnic breakfast and picnic lunch, we return to Evanston in the afternoon for a short break before dinner. After dinner at a good restaurant we return to the ranch for evening birding and wildlife viewing, including looking for night birds as desired. Deseret Ranch is also a convenient base from which to visit other great birding locations, such as the Great Salt Lake, Antelope Island, the Uinta Mountains, Bear Lake, and Cache Valley. Weekend and longer tours usually include visits to off-ranch sites that have birding opportunities not found on the ranch. The Memorial Day weekend may be the single best time to visit Deseret Ranch. We start with a visit to Antelope Island in the Great Salt Lake to check out the shorebird migration, nesting owls, and look for Chukar before heading up to the ranch. At the ranch we find spring at its peak. Almost all of the “specialty” birds can be found at this time of year, and we can usually access at least some of the high country of the ranch. The wildflowers and vistas are at their most breathtaking, as spring blossoms along the ridges. The Blue and Ruffed Grouse display vigorously each morning, and the male Greater Sage-Grouse loaf on the upper hills, and some years are still displaying early in the morning. Flammulated and Saw-whet Owls call it the mountain woodlands each evening. There’s so much going on that it’s hard to decide where to start. Rest assured that, whatever you choose, you won’t be disappointed. Arrival and Departure information: The tour begins in Salt Lake City as soon as everyone arrives on Friday (but not after 3 pm), and lasts through noon on Tuesday. Flights to and from Salt Lake City should be arranged to arrive no later than 3 pm on Friday, and depart no earlier than noon on Tuesday. As an alternative, you may fly into Salt Lake City on Thursday, and out from Salt Lake City on Wednesday. You will be responsible for your own accommodations in Salt Lake City on Thursday and Tuesday nights (We can make a reservation for you, however). If you have further questions regarding this trip, please call toll free (866) 552-0221, or e-mail to cbirds@westwings.com |
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"I want to thank you for the birding trip last weekend. I truly did enjoy myself. I wound up with 23 new birds plus many western birds that I had only seen once or twice before. You really did a wonderful job...especially trying to find birds that we wanted to see (need I mention the Sage Sparrow?) By all means, please use me as a reference as I would be happy to endorse the trip. I have to say it was one of my best birding adventures. Thanks again!" Bill Dustin, Charlotte, North Carolina |
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This is the actual list of birds that have been seen on this tour. Birds marked with an asterisk (*) are rare, and not to be expected. A typical trip list from this tour will have about 160 species. The birds seen on any tour will vary, according to the yearly fluctuations in bird numbers, the desires of tour participants, and luck. |
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| Canada Goose Wood Duck Green-winged Teal Mallard Northern Pintail Blue-winged Teal Cinnamon Teal Northern Shoveler Gadwall American Wigeon Canvasback Redhead Ring-necked Duck Greater Scaup Lesser Scaup Barrow's Goldeneye Bufflehead Hooded Merganser Common Merganser Red-breasted Merganser Ruddy Duck Gray Partridge Chukar Ring-necked Pheasant Ruffed Grouse Greater Sage-Grouse Blue Grouse Sharp-tailed Grouse California Quail Common Loon Pied-billed Grebe Horned Grebe Eared Grebe Western Grebe Clark's Grebe American White Pelican Double-crested Cormorant American Bittern Great Blue Heron Snowy Egret Cattle Egret Black-crowned Night-Heron White-faced Ibis Turkey Vulture Osprey Bald Eagle Northern Harrier Sharp-shinned Hawk Cooper's Hawk Northern Goshawk Swainson's Hawk Red-tailed Hawk Ferruginous Hawk Golden Eagle American Kestrel Peregrine Falcon Prairie Falcon Virginia Rail Sora American Coot | ||||||||||||||||
| Sandhill Crane Black-bellied Plover Snowy Plover Semipalmated Plover Killdeer Black-necked Stilt American Avocet Greater Yellowlegs Willet Wandering Tattler* Spotted Sandpiper Long-billed Curlew Marbled Godwit Sanderling Semipalmated Sandpiper Western Sand piper Least Sandpiper White-rumped Sandpiper* Dunlin Long-billed Dowitcher Wilson’s Snipe Wilson's Phalarope Red-necked Phalarope Franklin's Gull Ring-billed Gull California Gull Caspian Tern Common Tern Forster's Tern Least Tern* Black Tern Rock Pigeon Band-tailed Pigeon Mourning Dove Yellow-billed Cuckoo Barn Owl Flammulated Owl Western Screech-Owl Great Horned Owl Burrowing Owl Long-eared Owl Short-eared Owl Northern Saw-whet Owl Common Nighthawk Common Poorwill White-throated Swift Black-chinned Hummingbird Calliope Hummingbird Broad-tailed Hummingbird Belted Kingfisher Williamson’s Sapsucker Red-naped Sapsucker Downy Woodpecker Hairy Woodpecker Northern Flicker Olive-sided Flycatcher Western Wood-Pewee Willow Flycatcher Hammond's Flycatcher Gray Flycatcher Dusky Flycatcher | Cordilleran Flycatcher Say's Pheobe Ash-throated Flycatcher Western Kingbird Eastern Kingbird Loggerhead Shrike White-eyed Vireo* Plumbeous Vireo Warbling Vireo Steller's Jay Western Scrub-Jay Pinyon Jay Clark’s Nutcracker Black-billed Magpie American Crow Common Raven Horned Lark Purple Martin Tree Swallow Violet-green Swallow No. Rough-winged Swallow Bank Swallow Cliff Swallow Barn Swallow Black-capped Chickadee Mountain Chickadee Juniper Titmouse Bushtit Red-breasted Nuthatch Brown Creeper Rock Wren Canyon Wren Bewick’s Wren House Wren Marsh Wren American Dipper Golden-crowned Kinglet Ruby-crowned Kinglet Blue-gray Gnatcatcher Mountain Bluebird Townsend’s Solitaire Swainson's Thrush Hermit Thrush American Robin Gray Catbird Northern Mockingbird Sage Thrasher European Starling American Pipit Cedar Waxwing Orange-crowned Warbler Virginia's Warbler Yellow Warbler Black-throated Blue Warbler* Yellow-rumped Warbler Townsend's Warbler Blackpoll Warbler* Black-and-white Warbler American Redstart Ovenbird* Northern Waterthrush | Louisiana Waterthrush* MacGillivray's Warbler Common Yellowthroat Wilson's Warbler Western Tanager Green-tailed Towhee Spotted Towhee Chipping Sparrow Brewer's Sparrow Vesper Sparrow Lark Sparrow Sage Sparrow Lark Bunting Savannah Sparrow Fox Sparrow Song Sparrow Lincoln's Sparrow White-crowned Sparrow Dark-eyed Junco Black-headed Grosbeak Lazuli Bunting Indigo Bunting* Bobolink Red-winged Blackbird Western Meadowlark Yellow-headed Blackbird Brewer's Blackbird Common Grackle Brown-headed Cowbird Bullock’s Oriole Cassin's Finch House Finch Red Crossbill Pine Siskin Lesser Goldfinch American Goldfinch Evening Grosbeak House Sparrow Selected Mammals (this is not a complete list) Raccoon Longtail Weasel Badger Coyote Red Fox Whitetail Prairie Dog Rock Squirrel Uinta Ground Squirrel chipmunk sp. Red Squirrel Beaver Muskrat Blacktail Jackrabbit Mountain Cottontail Elk Mule Deer Moose Pronghorn Bison | ||||||||||||||
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For general questions and information email cbirds@westwings.com: For reservation status or account information email assistant@westwings.com: Or contact us by phone toll free at 866-552-0221: Our local number is 801-487-9453
Please send reservation forms and other mail to Westwings, Inc. P.O. Box 521720 Salt Lake City UT, 84152 Back to Top |
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