The Denver Post

“Sky islands”

Isolated mountain formations provide a birding adventure in Arizona

- By Elaine Glusac © The New York Times Co.

The elegant trogon, befitting its name, is clever. One can perch in a tree 10 feet overhead and draw little attention, though it’s come dressed for it, with a striking yellow beak, blush-red breast topped with a white collar, and metallic green back tapering, such as tuxedo tails, to finely barred tail feathers.

As a birding fan, I’d made its acquaintan­ce on trips to Mexico. But during the pandemic, in my desire to find unexpected, wondrous and uncrowded places in the United States, I learned that the trogon comes north, often visiting a section of southeast Arizona that looks, from a bird’s point of view, a lot like the highlands of Mexico.

These are “sky islands,” isolated mountain formations separated by seas of desert that are uniquely biodiverse, offering habitats from scrub and grasslands to pine and fir forests as they rise.

Between the Rocky Mountains and Mexico’s Sierra Madre Occidental­s lie nearly 60 sky islands, an “archipelag­o of mountains that are steppingst­ones between two big ranges,” said Peg Abbott, the owner of Naturalist Journeys, a birding and nature tour operator based in the region. Stretched apart some 15 million years ago and isolated by the developmen­t of arid grasslands and deserts between them, about 15 sky islands lie in Arizona’s Coronado National Forest; the rest are in Mexico.

I met Abbott on a five-day trip in May to three of Arizona’s sky island ranges — the Santa Rita, Chiricahua and Huachuca mountains — on my first postvaccin­ation trip, designed to safely spend time hiking outdoors but squarely in the path of potential encounters with Crayola-colored warblers, up to 15 species of hummingbir­ds and seasonal guests such as the elegant trogon.

Flocking birders and barking owls

From Tucson, I drove roughly 30 miles south to Green Valley and turned southeast for Madera Canyon in the Santa Rita Mountains, where more than 250 bird species have been documented. The road ascended from cactus flats to grass and oak savannas into a narrowing canyon, a crease of shady oak and sycamore forest flanking a seasonal stream, bone dry in drought conditions.

At the Santa Rita Lodge in the largely undevelope­d canyon, I checked into a creekside casita ($160) and was asked to keep my showers short because of the drought.

But the lack of rainfall hadn’t discourage­d the birds, or the birders. On the weaving twolane road that dead-ends at about 5,400 feet, with footpaths ascending another 4,000 feet to Mount Wrightson, a flock of wild Gould’s turkeys held up traffic. The males, with fully fanned tail feathers, dragged their wings audibly on the pavement. In front of the lodge, more than a dozen feeders were filled with bridled titmouse, cartoonish acorn woodpecker­s, thick-billed, black-headed grosbeaks and gregarious pine siskins.

Hummingbir­d feeders, filled with sweetened water, were staked closer to the benches facing this bird theater, allowing one woman to train her binoculars on a broad-billed hummingbir­d just 2 feet away for a microscopi­c view of its red beak and darting tongue.

The staffer checking me in said trogons hadn’t been seen yet this year, but directed me to the Carrie Nation Trail in the morning to look. Meanwhile, she suggested I head across the street at sunset to see the elf owl that burrows in a utility pole there.

“It’s like the littlest dog that has the biggest bark,” said Steve Holt, the lodge owner, speaking of the tiny elf owl that I and a dozen guests gathered to see, settling ultimately for the chirping, whistling and trilling that indicated it was nearby.

“In the path of things that move on currents”

Posted outside Cave Creek Ranch in the Chiricahua Mountains, about 150 miles southeast of Tucson, a schedule of the expected arrival dates of migrating and seasonal birds anticipate­d the elegant trogon April 6.

“This year, almost everything’s been late,” said Reed Peters, the owner of the 13-cabin retreat where I joined Abbott, the tour operator, and her group of about a dozen travelers on a nine-day birding trip in the sky islands. They were paging through a binder of listings, checking off the day’s sightings, including the northern beardless tyrannulet and greater pewee.

“Sky islands are a concept of geography that not a lot of people in the U.S. know,” said Abbott, explaining the similariti­es between the Galápagos Islands and the sky islands to the group over drinks. “Part of diversity is how close are you to the big mama ship that has all the species, and part is being in the path of things that move on currents and wind. The principles of island biogeograp­hy play out in these sky islands.”

In Arizona, breeding trogons tend to nest in the cavities of big trees such as sycamores that grow in riparian zones, which have streams or rivers. Fortunatel­y, the next day, the water was flowing in Cave Creek Canyon, just a few miles beyond the ranch where I joined a loose confederat­ion of birders on a threehour trek along the road and the South Fork Trail that continues along the creek.

Ears trained for the trogon, we delighted in flamboyant warblers and a family of grosbeaks bathing in a rock pool. At an inviting swimming hole known as “The Bathtub,” I heard something between a bark, a gobble and a chortle, possibly a trogon, but I never saw it.

“He likes to hang out there,” Abbott confirmed that afternoon as she drove me to the top of the Chiricahua­s on a tour that took in campground­s where visitors erected their own hummingbir­d feeders, and the Southweste­rn Research Station, a wilderness campus managed by the American Museum of Natural History in New York City, where scientists have conducted long-term studies on Mexican jay breeding, hummingbir­d physiology and the social behavior of ants.

As we climbed to 8,500 feet, we left grasslands for oak-andpine forests and Douglas fir stands, catching red-faced and yellow-rumped warblers amid alligator junipers with coarse, block-patterned bark, and olive and Grace’s warblers near a meadow of lupine and iris.

“They say it’s like driving from Mexico to Canada in an hour,” she said.

“Hiking and birding are incompatib­le”

Birding is a patient practice. You can put yourself in the path of migration and still miss sightings through inattentio­n or impatience or, in my case, a fitness fanatic’s stride. As a Cave Creek birder from Austin, Texas, put it, “Hiking and birding are incompatib­le. Birders are always stopping.”

What I needed was a guide to set the appropriat­e pace, which I found in Chris Harbard. A native of England, Harbard worked for 24 years for the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds before moving to the United States and settling, in 2016, in the Huachuca Mountains, roughly between the Santa Ritas and Chiricahua­s, where he writes about birds between lecturing gigs on expedition cruise ships.

He and his wife, Mari Cea, run the Southwest Wings birding festival in May and August — the latter is high season for hummingbir­ds — with lectures and tours. They also rent a spacious Airbnb casita behind their home in Hereford in a very birdy yard; Harbard’s list of yard sightings is more than 150 species. Proving that the thrill never fades, we all got quiet when the elusive Montezuma quail, a rotund, charismati­c bird with facial racing stripes and polka-dot sides, emerged from the tall grass just before sunset.

The next morning, I followed Harbard to Ramsey Canyon Preserve, a site managed by the Nature Conservanc­y ($8), and my last hope for a trogon.

From a distance, the scrubby slopes of the Huachucas look barren, but they harbor astonishin­gly life-filled, creek-cut folds, including Ramsey Canyon, shaded by towering whitebarke­d sycamores. Following his meditative pace, we watched painted redstarts flitting from tree to tree and spied a velvety red hepatic tanager singing for a mate until Harbard, possessed of the bionic ears that distinguis­h the best birding guides, caught a barking sound.

“Trogon,” he whispered, pointing down the creek.

Just a few minutes after backtracki­ng and intensely scanning the canopy, we found him, just 10 feet above, his red breast, white collar and striped tail feather impeccable, teaching me the difference between birdwatchi­ng and simply looking.

“If you look closely,” Harbard said, “he has incredibly long eyelashes.”

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 ?? Photos by John Burcham, © The New York Times Co. ?? A view of the Santa Rita Mountains and Madera Canyon in southern Arizona in June. Separated by seas of desert, the mountainou­s enclaves attract birds from miles around.
Photos by John Burcham, © The New York Times Co. A view of the Santa Rita Mountains and Madera Canyon in southern Arizona in June. Separated by seas of desert, the mountainou­s enclaves attract birds from miles around.
 ??  ?? Left: Rock walls tower above the South Fork Trail in Cave Creek Canyon, Ariz. Right: A broad-billed hummingbir­d on the grounds of the Santa Rita Lodge in Arizona’s Madera Canyon.
Left: Rock walls tower above the South Fork Trail in Cave Creek Canyon, Ariz. Right: A broad-billed hummingbir­d on the grounds of the Santa Rita Lodge in Arizona’s Madera Canyon.
 ?? John Burcham, © The New York Times Co. ?? The Portal Peak Lodge is a weathered motel with a restaurant and outdoor patio with a stage for live music.
John Burcham, © The New York Times Co. The Portal Peak Lodge is a weathered motel with a restaurant and outdoor patio with a stage for live music.

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