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A
Paradise for Bird Watchers
in the Verde Valley
On a clear spring
morning, a group of birders sets out for the Verde River Greenway.
Just minutes up the trail they spot a fiery northern cardinal
sitting on a branch. Later, they see mourning doves, a ladder-backed
woodpecker, vermilion flycatchers, a red-winged hawk, great blue
herons, summer tanagers, a Scott’s oriole and, through a scope, an
American kestrel eating a lizard.

Northern Cardinal
Although birders have
discovered southeastern Arizona, the bird-watching paradise in Sedona
and the Verde Valley is still a well-kept secret. The area, which
encompasses the communities of Camp Verde, Clarkdale, Cornville,
Cottonwood, Page Springs, Jerome and Sedona, offers abundant year-round
opportunities for bird watching. Its
mild, four-season climate and many miles of riparian habitat along the
Verde River Watershed attract nearly a third of the 900 species of birds
in the United States and Canada—from the miniature hummingbird to
broad-winged raptors.

Hummingbird
According to the
Northern Arizona Audubon Society, the Verde Valley area offers
“tremendous birding opportunities in an extremely compact area.
Over a hundred and thirty species of birds are typically seen on
one day excursion in May - and all in a traveling distance of less than
50 miles!”
“Most of the neotropical migrants are seen between April 1
and October 1,” notes Virginia Gilmore in her classic book Birding Sedona The Verde Valley. “Verde Valley wintering
species typically include species of waterfowl and sparrows, also
juncos, kinglets, hermit thrushes and yellow-rumped warblers.”

HEY?! Wrong page,
get out of the picture!
(click on image :-)
The Northern
Arizona Audubon Society has identified two “important birding
areas,” the 76 acres of
prime wildlife habitat at Lower Oak Creek in Page Springs and Tavasci
Marsh, one of the few fresh-water marshes in Arizona. The marsh adjoins
Tuzigoot National Monument and Dead
Horse Ranch State Park.

Dead Horse Ranch State Park
Other excellent birding sites in
the area include:
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Camp
Verde Riparian Preserve, 125 acres owned and managed by the Salt
River Project “to provide habitat for the endangered southwestern
willow flycatcher and the yellow-billed cuckoo.” Many other
species also flock to the site.
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Dead
Horse Ranch State Park, a 423-acre park, which is an oasis for
wildlife and includes the Verde River Greenway with its
cottonwood-willow habitat along the Verde River.
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Mingus
Mountain, an easily accessible high-altitude home for bluebirds,
white-breasted nuthatches, olive warblers and other species.
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Montezuma
Well, a riparian habitat that attracts water birds and
open-country species, such as flycatchers, vireos and thrashers.
It is a nesting home for hawks, cuckoos and canyon and rock
wrens. Many species can
also be spotted south of the well at Wet Beaver Creek, Bull Pen
Ranch Campground and the West Clear Creek campground.
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Oak
Creek Canyon, a diverse riparian area and the state’s second most
popular canyon. The
canyon is home to Slide Rock State Park and many trails, including
the popular West Fork Trail. Possible
sightings range from the black-chinned sparrow and bridled titmouse
to peregrine falcons, hummingbirds, tanagers, towhees, vireos and
other species.
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Red
Rock State Park, a 286-acre nature preserve and environmental
education center, with both riparian and high-desert habitats. The
park offers many special programs, including early-morning guided
bird tours on Wednesdays and Saturdays. Times change throughout the year.
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Sycamore
Canyon, where black-hawk and bald eagles nest and there are possible
sightings of other birds such as hawks, doves, herons and migrating
sparrows. The canyon is
accessible by hiking and the Verde Canyon Railroad.
“I’ve been birding the Verde Valley and
Flagstaff area for 13 years now and know it to be a wonderful spot where
anyone can turn up a real gem at any time,” says Tom Linda, a birder
and popular guide at the Verde Valley Birding
and Nature
Festival.
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