Wednesday, May 13, 2026

Lake Hodges - near Escondido, California

For my birthday this year Judy surprised me with a visit to Lake Hodges. We drove to Escondido and spent the night on Friday, April 17, and went birding at Lake Hodges on Saturday morning. We used to live in San Diego and I remember hearing about Lake Hodges back then, but I never knew where it was. I was very surprised to learn it was only 3 miles south of Escondido. It is on the San Dieguito River so it snakes along through a canyon and is not very wide. When full it has a maximum depth of 115 feet and a 27 mile shoreline. However, in 2017, following the Oroville Dam crisis in northern California, the state conducted spillway inspections on all state dams and Hodges Dam did not pass inspection. So the maximum level of the dam was lowered to 20 feet below the spillway so repair work could take place. The water level was further reduced in May 2023 when cracks and defects in the dam were discovered. Apparently construction of a new dam was started and the dam, lake and recreation area were opened again in June 2023. The new dam is anticipated to be completed in 2034. The current water level is about 76 feet. Following are photos of our morning:
Male California quail

Bushtit

Anna's hummingbird

Western bluebird

Red-tailed hawk

Clark's grebe

Western grebe. Distinguished from the Clark's grebe by its eye being part of the upper black part of its head, as opposed to in the white below the black part of the head. 

All of the grebes we saw were Western grebes, except for the Clark's grebe we saw first thing. The grebes were doing their fun mating rituals like this synchronized swimming. 

Killdeer with its tail feather fluffed out. I don't believe I've ever seen that before. Quite beautiful. 

The killdeer as it looks normally. 

Black crowned night heron. We saw four or five flying together land near each other in trees. 

Snowy egret in breeding plumage. 

Great-tailed grackle. Lots of them around. 

California scrub-jay with mansion on the nearby hill as a backdrop. 

Acorn woodpecker on a granary tree. Note all the imbedded acorns. 

Black phoebe working on an insect. 

Lesser goldfinch. 

Great egret

Mourning dove

Eurasian collared dove

Blue grosbeak. However, the beautiful colors are masked by the early morning light and fog. 

Northern rough-winged swallow. Swallows were heavy in the area flying in crazy patterns. I thought they were bats. 

Cliff swallow

American coot. 
Lake Hodges is a beautiful area with lots of wildlife. Very fun to go to a new location and expand our knowledge of California. 

Tuesday, May 12, 2026

Keoladeo National Park - India

Keoladeo National Park, also known as Keoladeo Ghana National Park, is in Rajasthan,  India, 155 miles northeast of Ranthambore National Park by car, 35 miles west of Agra by car and 115 miles south of New Delhi by car. From 1899 it was a duck shooting preserve, became the Bharatpur Bird Sanctuary in 1956, became a national park in 1982 and a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1985. It is a human-made and regulated wetland in this dry region, protects Bharatpur from flash floods and provides pastures for local cattle and livestock. It is 11 square miles of biodiversity with over 400 species of bird, 20 of fish, 70 of reptiles and amphibians, 50 of mammal and 400 of plants. One-third is wetlands with mounds, dykes and open water. It also has uplands with tall grass species and scattered trees and shrubs; uplands with short grasses; and woodlands. It is sometimes referred to as the best birding area in India, although I think Kaziranga National Park beats it in that regard. 

We visited twice, once in the late afternoon of Tuesday, November 25, 2025 and the following morning on November 26. Our first afternoon I was with my brothers-in-law, Stan Jones and David Kenison and a guide on a motorized rickshaw. We spent most of our time walking down one trail into the wetland with lots of nesting painted storks. The next morning we also had our wives along, the same guide and used two motorized rickshaws. Our guide has worked there for ten years and was very good. 

Following are photos of some of the wildlife we saw, mostly birds:
Dusky eagle-owl. Our guide spotted it at some distance and set up a scope to look at it. 

A black bittern that are guide knew right where to find it. Bitterns are notorious difficult to find and see. 

A jungle nightjar, another very difficult bird to find and see. Our guide found several of them in the vegetation above a small creek along the side of the road. 

A brahminy starling, a crazy looking bird I hoped to see after looking at photos of birds found at Keoladeo. 

White-eared bulbul.

Bluethroat - also the photo below. 


White-breasted waterhen.

Lesser whitethroat

Lesser chiffchaff.

Knob-billed ducks. Another bird I'd hoped to see, but wish I'd had a closer view. 

Orange-headed thrush.

Indian gray hornbill.

Gray francolin, my first, but a bird we later saw quite a bit of later in Ranthambore NP. 

Yellow-throated sparrow. 

Wire-tailed swallow

Little grebes

Bronze-winged jacana - also next photo


Alexandrine parakeet. A beautiful bird we saw in Kaziranga NP the year before, but got much better views of here. 

Tawny eagle, an eagle we'd seen before at Hwange NP in Zimbabwe. Our guide said it was an Indian spotted eagle, but a top identifier on iNaturalist convincingly suggested the tawny eagle. 

Imperial eagle

Indian spot-billed duck

Oriental magpie-robin

Jungle babbler - also next photo


Indian pond heron - also the next photo. 


Axis deer

Black-crowned night heron

Indian flying fox

Golden jackals

Laughing dove

Long-tailed shrike

Oriental darter

Pied kingfisher

Purple heron

Spotted owlet

Yellow-footed green pigeons

Painted storks. I'm guessing maybe the best place to see them in the world. Lots of nests - see more below. 


Western marsh harrier. A much better look at a bird I saw in Azerbaijan. 

More painted storks - here and below. 


White-throated kingfisher

Indian pied starling

Rhesus  macaque

Red-wattled lapwing

Gray heron - here and below


Little egret

Medium egret
We had a great guide and I would love to have spent more time here, particularly in the non-marsh habitat.