![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiJ4WGRkRjwrsEgVHcFc-7dv7IzYELeMkYluNfs_mPU6YhHNP7hvftGV015-nASxxc0_g3D49yTlaGrGxQFHo2nWkHAWH9U85wMqJ4bgqgZUEIANi4qv7g7ClDfyg2QV1m4FgQ1KZiplx4/s320/Female-Cape-May-Smith-28-Ap.jpg)
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEicAzPa_ByEaeIWKtUSbyAjj4pd6APnvl5SGidZaX65DKST_ySwdk9MuPqsJqkHq3MOSQ3Vyt05bM2q98VNcVV3T9kZW6ZpOi3ze1v_UuHs-qqLq5cmrGUyD9QBF83FQ7noAwvFiGJhlaQ/s320/Bobolinks-HWY87-28-Apr-09-O.jpg)
Just a few photos - firstly a bundle of Bobolinks seen from the road, that contained at least 200 birds with a few dandy Dickcissels thrown in for good measure too. These were seen during a midday free walk guided for Houston Audubon Society. In the afternoon another guided walk in the Smith Oaks sanctuary on High Island finally produced the Cape May Warbler I had been chasing for two days. It was a lowly female so not the showstopping bird that a male is but a lifer all the same, tarnished a little when I then missed a male by minutes late on!!!
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