Crooked River Hwy 27
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Leave Prineville south on Main Street. This becomes the Crooked River Hwy 27 and joins with Highway 20 45 miles to the south. The road becomes gravel after about 30 miles but is well maintained.
Directions
Habitat and Birds
The road runs through farmland, juniper forest, sage flats, and canyons. In the farmland, watch for Western Meadowlark, Western Kingbird, plenty of raptors in the winter. The canyon can produce Canyon Wren, Chukar, and Rock Wren. The riparian areas along this river can be very productive during migration. Summer: Lazuli Bunting, Bullock’s Oriole, and Yellow-breasted Chat nest in these areas and Golden Eagles nest on the cliffs above. Prairie Falcons and Western Screech-Owls also nest here. Yellow Warblers are everywhere in the summer months. . Near the junction of Hwy 20, look and listen for sagebrush-associated species like Ferruginous Hawk, Sage Thrasher, Brewer’s Sparrow, and Sagebrush Sparrow. Once you climb out of the canyon, you will enter sagebrush-juniper steppe. Grassy areas produce Horned Larks and Vesper Sparrows along with Lark Sparrows. Gray Flycatchers, Black-throated Gray Warblers, and Ash-throated Flycatchers use the juniper forest for nesting. Winter: Townsend’s Solitaires and American Robins are the dominate birds in winter. Winter raptors include Golden and Bald Eagles, Prairie Falcons, Ferruginous Hawks, The canyon is a good place to find Northern Saw-Whet Owls that use the canyon for shelter. Be mindful of the Deschutes County border if you are county birding. It’s unmarked and about 2 miles north of Hwy 20.
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