Saturday, March 14, 2026

 

    Altamira Oriole male

Lower Rio Grande River Valley

7-12 March 2026

    Gray Hawk adult in flight
 

I joined David Wilcove on a birding adventure to the Lower Rio Grande Valley of south Texas. We flew into McAllen (via Houston) and birded by car at a half-dozen well-known birding venues up and down the Valley. Accounts for each of these are featured in the narrative below.


    Band-celled Sister


 

The Valley

The Lower Rio Grande (“the Valley”) stretches from the mouth of the River at Boca Chica beach (site of Elon Musk’s Star Base) northwestward up to Falcon Dam covering a road distance of about 150 miles.


    Ladder-backed Woodpecker male


 

The notable towns include (from southeast to northwest) Brownsville, Harlingen, Weslaco, Edinburg, McAllen, Mission, Sullivan City, Rio Grande City, and Roma. McAllen is central to the Valley and is generally agreed to be the best place for birders to base themselves, unless they are camping. There are many comfortable national chain motels here to choose from.


    Audubon's Oriole


 

Because this is a strip along a national border, the Valley is heavily developed. The area is distinctive for its abundance of highways and strip malls. What was once Texas thorn scrub and crop agriculture has been converted to urban sprawl. Luckily, some green spaces have been set aside in the form of parks and reserves. These are where birders devote their time and effort.


    Looking out over Santa Ana NWR woodlands from its high tower


 

McAllen, Texas

McAllen has an airport with regular flights to and from Houston and Dallas. The city is a network of highways and major roads offering ready access to wherever one wishes to go. Also many restaurants, featuring national chains (Chili’s, PF Chang’s, etc) and swarms of local Mexican and Tex-Mex watering holes (and of course Whataburger). We stayed in the  Holiday Inn Express (Medical Center) and found it to be perfect for our needs, with a pool, a morning breakfast bar, and large and comfy rooms.


    Green Jay


 

National Butterfly Center

We visited the National Butterfly Center on three occasions. It is a 15-minute drive from the motel and is set down on the River. The NBC has a large visitor center, knowledgeable and helpful staff, and a big trail network that gives access to gardens and woodland patches. The staff actively plant and water in order to create the best butterfly habitat, but this year it  was very dry in mid-March and neither the gardens nor the butterflies were at peak status. We saw few butterflies, mainly sulphurs and Giant Swallowtails.


    Pickers harvesting cilantro


 

The back left corner of the NBC has a large bird feeding station, which, while we were there, was the highlight of the campus. The Plain Chachalacas appeared to be preparing to breed and were flocking in numbers with some individuals cackling loudly every few minutes. The racket they made was quite remarkable. Second in noise-making were the large flocks of Red-winged Blackbirds, which filled the air with what sounded like a million cicadas going off.



    Bronze Cowbird male


 

All this bird noise seemed to attract other species of hungry birds to the feeders—orioles, woodpeckers, sparrows, thrashers, cowbirds, grackles, and more.


    Golden-fronted Woodpecker male


 

Bentson-Rio Grande Valley State Park

Bentson-Rio Grande is just a bit upstream from the NBS, and one afternoon we drove over there to see what was up. A Hooked-billed Kite had been reported there on a preceding day. By the time we arrived the sun and heat and wind made birding there a bad bet, so we hung out in the Visitor Center and the parking lot and basically bided our time, hoping the Kite would fly over. It was not to be…  I had camped in this Park in 2017 and knew it offered good woodland walking and birding by the River. A tram carries visitors to various corners of this large reserve, but we were there too late for any tram travel.


    The ominpresent Border Patrol


 

Edinburg Scenic Wetlands

There was a single bird species in the Valley at this time that had attracted David’s attention as an accomplished North American (ABA area) birder. This was a solitary female Crimson-collared Grosbeak, which had been vacationing from Mexico for several months at the Edinburg Scenic Wetlands. The grosbeak was the only novelty that David could add to his list, and it was this bird that started our conversation about visiting the Valley.


    Crimson-collared Grosbeak female


 

So on our first day in the field we drove 13 minutes to this urban green space just a bit northeast of McAllen. The site is mainly lush thorn-scrub and artificial ponds with an abundance of trails for birding. It, too, has a nice visitor center and friendly and helpful staff. We were assured the grosbeak was present and that it would call from time to time.


    Least Grebe


 

It took us about 45 minutes to get our first look at the handsome bird, and we encountered it on 3-4 occasions during our morning stay there. We watched it feeding on the globular green fruit of the Potato Tree (Solanum erianthum). We did hear it calling several times—something that makes it possible to locate.


    Gray Hawk


 

Other birds we saw there included Least Grebe, Green Kingfisher, Orange-crowned Warbler, and White-eyed Vireo.


    Fox Squirrel


 

Estero Llano Grande State Park

We twice visited Estero Llano Grande and walked its trails. Here some young college-age super-birders showed us a Common Pauraque roosting in the dry leaves near a trail-edge.


    roosting Parauque, looking like dry leaves


 

We spent considerable time examining roosting brown ducks to determine whether they were female Mallards, Mottled Ducks, or Mexican Ducks.


    back left: female Mallard, front left hybrid Mottled x Mexican Duck (?), right side: 2 Mottled Ducks


 

    Mottled Ducks


A Tropical Parula had been reported on the Green Jay Trail of the Park and we walked this trail a number of times in search of this tiny sprite, but to no avail. Instead we saw a Nine-banded Armadillo, Black-capped Titmice, and Wilson’s Warbler.


    Nine-banded Armadillo


 

The wetlands featured a large aggregation of wading birds—White Ibis, White-faced Ibis, Snowy Egrets, Little Blue Heron, and two Soras.


    White Ibis, White-faced Ibis, Snowy Egret


 

Couch’s Kingbirds were the most common flycatcher in the Valley at this time, identified by voice.

 

    Couch's Kingbird

 

Santa Ana National Wildlife Refuge

We started one morning at Santa Ana. It, like Bentson-Rio Grande offers lots of trail-walking down by the River, both through woodlands and open wetlands. This morning, the woodlands were remarkably quiet but the wetlands were more productive. Three highlights were memorable: A Gray Hawk by the woodland edge, a Greater and Lesser Yellowlegs posed side by side to show the size difference, and several Cinnamon Teal drakes showing off the red iris and rich burnished plumage.


    Greater and Lesser Yellowlegs



    Cinnamon Teal


 

We bumped into a group of young naturalists in search of spiders. The group was accompanied by a well-appointed guard with automatic weapon and a cadaver dog at his side. Not sure why spider-hunters needed the chaperone…


    On the trail in Santa Ana (note automatic weapon)


 

Salineño Wildlife Reserve

On our last morning, we drove 90 minutes north and west to the Salineño Reserve, just below Falcon Dam. Here there is nice access to the wooded banks of the River and also a nice array of bird feeders within the tiny reserve itself. Along the river we hunted for Morelet’s Seedeater and Northern Beardless Tyrannulet, but no luck! No Muscovy ducks either. But we glimpsed a single Red-billed Pigeon high overhead, racing  over the River into Mexico. That was a lifer for me.  The feeders were rather ho-hum, but did feature a hybrid Bullock’s-Baltimore Oriole.


    looking across to rural Tamaulipas



    Wild Turkey gobbler


 

Roma Bluffs

On our drive back from Salineño we stopped in Roma for lunch and also visited Roma Bluffs to look out over the Rio Grande into Ciudad Miguel Alemán.


    vista across to Mexico from Roma Bluffs


    Tacos Reynosa platter with Charro beans (and Topo Chico!) at Poncho's, McAllen


 

Restaurants

One does not travel to south Texas for its restaurants. Naturally, Mexican fare is the cuisine offered in greatest abundance, and we sampled an array of Mexican eateries. All were adequate but few meals would have earned more than a couple of stars. My favorite meal was a Tacos Reynosa platter served at Poncho’s in McAllen. That restaurant would garner zero stars for beauty or tidiness, but the food was good, especially when washed down with a chilly Topo Chico!


    Great Kiskadee


 

Driving

South Texas is the land of highways and frontage roads. Posted speeds of 65, 70, and 75 are not uncommon. Everybody is in a hurry to get wherever they are going. Be prepared for some serious defensive driving…


    White-tipped Dove


 

Weather and Season

Warm or hot and dry, often windy, especially in the afternoon. Not great birding weather. Best to start  the day  before sunrise to take advantage of the cooler hours just after dawn. We were lucky to be there just after the time change to Daylight Savings, when the sun did not rise until 7:40AM. Seasonally, mid-March apparently is not the best time to bird the Valley. For butterflies, October and November are best, and mid-winter may be best for the birdlife as well.


    close-up of flank feathering of Wild Turkey gobbler


 

The Wall

The border wall is in place in many places along the River, but it poses no constraints on visiting naturalists. It is far from complete, and these days the wall is being constructed both by the Feds as well as by the Texas state government.


    A chunk of new border wall produced by the Texas state government (taller and grander than the Fed wall). 


 

Both the National Butterfly Center and Salineño Reserve are under current threat of habitat destruction from wall builders. The bare-earth clearing created to make a corridor for the wall is excessive, often 200-300 meters wide. And of course wildlife cannot pass through the wall, so this is another problem for Nature in the LRGV.


    Here's a chunk of Fed wall near the Butterfly Center (on Military Road)


 

Recommendations

Though we did see the Grosbeak, our visit to the Valley for birding and butterfly hunting was a disappointment. We assume the combination of season and weather weighed against us.


    Clay-colored Thrush


    Green Jay
 


We suggest future visitors carefully plan the timing of their visit to line up with the peak season for either butterflies or birds. Year-to-year variation (such as El Niño La Niña) may have an impact that should be considered as well. Happy travels!


    female Crimson-collared Groasbeak chomping on a fruit of the Potato Tree


 

    Ceiba speciosa

 

 

 



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