Birdsong PCT Southern California Desert Section Bird Report


Trail name

On day 3, I got up early and left Cibbets camp. While walking through the canyon I heard so many different birds deep in the desert bushes. I pulled out my Merlin bird identification app that my friend recommended and started capturing three or four birds at a time. As I walked about another mile, I heard new birds and captured a few more. In 2.5 hours that morning I found 13 different birds. At a water stop I shared my fascination with the diversity and life in these desert landscapes and another hiker recommended the name of a trail: “Birdsong.” I had to try it on for a few days but I liked it. I like peaceful sounds, it resonates with my peaceful nature. And it also reflects one of the reasons why I hike: to find again what makes my heart sing and gives me life. Since that day I continue to track birds through my application. I had never been interested in bird watching or their songs before, but being present in nature helps me open my ears and eyes to the life around us. Other hikers also recommended I watch “Lister’s,” a YouTube documentary about immersion in the “birdwatching” community. I watched it back in my zero days and would recommend it to anyone interested in learning more.

I like to catch these birds in different areas and learn their songs. I have no idea what I’m doing, I’m just using the app to learn. I don’t know if some of these birds would be impossible to find and maybe it’s a bug in the Merlin app. But here’s a list of all the birds found at Kennedy Meadows that the app said it heard nearby when I stopped to listen to calls around me.

  1. Spotted Towhee
  2. black-chinned sparrow
  3. The Wrents
  4. Scottish Oriole
  5. Black-headed Grosbeak
  6. mountain quail
  7. blue gray mosquito
  8. Gray Vireo
  9. common crow
  10. white crowned sparrow
  11. Bewick’s wren
  12. Northern House Wren
  13. brown creeper
  14. California Towhee
  15. white-winged dove
  16. Poor common will
  17. great horned owl
  18. house finch
  19. Ash-throated flycatcher
  20. cactus wren
  21. Rufous crowned sparrow
  22. Lazuli bunting
  23. horned lark
  24. western lark
  25. california thresher
  26. Acorn Woodpecker
  27. Anna’s hummingbird
  28. lesser goldfinch
  29. Brewer’s Sparrow
  30. California Scrub Jay
  31. Jay Steller
  32. dark-eyed junco
  33. sparrow sparrow
  34. White-breasted Nuthatch
  35. Yellow-rumped Warbler
  36. Violet Green Swallow
  37. Dusky flycatcher
  38. pygmy nuthatch
  39. Williamson Sap Sucker
  40. fox sparrow
  41. band-tailed pigeon
  42. mountain titmouse
  43. northern flicker
  44. Northern Nightingale
  45. mourning dove
  46. wooded tit
  47. Western Wood Pewee
  48. Clark’s Nutcracker
  49. Jay Sprocket
  50. western tile
  51. Townsend’s Solitaire
  52. red-winged blackbird
  53. black phoebe
  54. song sparrow
  55. Northern Yellow Warbler
  56. Lawrence’s Goldfinch
  57. American pipit
  58. you gave
  59. white-throated swift
  60. Mallard
  61. Nuttal Woodpecker
  62. western owl
  63. Black-throated Gray Warbler
  64. Olive-sided flycatcher
  65. green-tailed towhee
  66. red-tailed hawk
  67. Hummingbird Costas
  68. White-headed Woodpecker
  69. american robin
  70. western tanager
  71. hairy woodpecker
  72. rock wren
  73. Leconte’s puncher
  74. purple finch
  75. Sage Phrasher
  76. bell sparrow
  77. oak titmouse
  78. lark sparrow
  79. american coot
  80. common gallinula
  81. Western chirping vireo
  82. black-throated sparrow
  83. Woodhouse’s Jay
  84. american kestrel
  85. Wilson’s Warbler
  86. Indigo bunting
  87. Eurasian collared dove

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