Sun City Texas Is A Bird Watcher's Paradise

By Ernesto Berturand


Millions of Americans have embraced the hobby of watching birds according to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. Most people choose to observe birds around their homes but many travel away from home to bird watch. There are many publicly accessible birding locations within a short drive of Sun City Texas, located in Georgetown. Texas boasts the highest number of species of all the states at 636 and Williamson County has over 400 species of birds. Many water birds such as great blue herons, varieties of egrets, wood ducks, and teals are attracted to the water retention ponds built around town to drain rainfall from parking lots.

Because Sun City Texas has many water features, creeks and natural areas that provide a great habitat for native and migratory birds, there are abundant opportunities to watch birds within the community. The Birding Special Interest Group is part of the Sun City Nature Club which promotes the enjoyment of birds, especially those native to central Texas. The Birding Club provides many reference materials such as books, DVDs, tapes and other materials that may be checked out from their library.

Wild birds are particularly abundant in Sun City Texas and club members get together for bird watching hikes, trips into the field and to check on homes for birds in native habitats. One can typically see the flocks of wild turkeys grazing in groups on the native grasses which thrive in the roughs of the golf courses. The bridge that crosses Berry Pond on Del Webb Boulevard is home to a sizable community of cave swallows which assemble their mud nests inside the cement spans under the bridge.

Perching together in groups on the shoreline of Berry Creek, there is a big population of turkey vultures near the bridge to the White Wing Golf Course. The largest scavenger birds in the United States, turkey vultures give preference to broad open areas which provide nearby woods for nesting. The dead and leafless trees, victims of several years of scarce rainfall, are ideal for vultures to keep keen eyes over the creek bed, an empty field and further down, the golf course. Feeding mostly on carrion, turkey vultures eat armadillos, turtles, squirrels and rabbits that often become a victim of road traffic throughout Sun City Texas.

Because of the plentiful wooded areas, water as well as food sources readily available to birds in Sun City Texas, it really is a birder's paradise. For folks that love to observe the growth and progression of baby birds, there's lots of homeowners who welcome nest establishment by simply erecting bird houses, furnishing bird seeds, and flowering garden plants to lure them. There are a number of kinds of hawks drawn to the fields of indigenous grasses, hummingbirds attracted to bird feeders and vivid flowering plants, and owls which track little vertebrates in the evenings.

Lucky Sun City Texas residents have spotted the numerous huge road runners that are native to our area. Their habitat is shrubby country and road runners build a nest on a platform of sticks low in a cactus or a bush. They can be up to 2 feet in length, about half of which is tail. These are particularly valuable birds that feed on reptiles such as snakes, small rodents, spiders, scorpions and road kills. Two roadrunners will sometimes attack a relatively large snake cooperatively.

Sun City Texas Birding Club bird walks are held twice monthly for members to get out and share their love of birds.




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