After 20 years, that most excellent of quail –– the Montezuma –– has finally deigned to visit our Roundhouse. Grasses around and above us are now very thick, giving them plenty of protective cover.
For a couple of months, usually in the evening, I’ve been hearing their short, infrequent whistles, which manage to be resonant, burry, and descending, all within about a second’s time. But hearing a Montezuma and seeing one are two very different propositions.
Finally! A pair has discovered the water dishes out by the bird feeders. Quietly and unpredictably, they slip in and out.
Montezuma Quail key their breeding to the rains. After dry winters, they wait till well after the summer monsoon has begun, unlike the Gambel’s and Scaled quail, which nest in spring and early summer. This year, our winter rains were good enough that the Montezumas could breed early, though so far the three glimpses we’ve had of our new residents have been of pairs, so we’re assuming that the females aren’t yet on nests.
If you’re searching for Montezuma Quail (not an uncommon situation for birders), they are easiest to see during breeding season when they are calling and after the young hatch, when the family groups are giving little contact calls.