
Birding The Florida Keys
April 18-26, 2026
Birding Tour in Southern Florida
Enjoy this relaxing tour of southern Florida as we explore the Everglades and Dry Tortugas National Parks and seek out the special local birds like Florida Scrub-Jay, Wood Stork, Mangrove Cuckoo, Bachman’s Sparrow, Red-cockaded Woodpecker, Snail Kite, Sooty Tern, Brown and Black Noddy, Masked Booby and more!
We’ll see warblers, shorebirds and seabirds all while taking in the scenic beauty of south Florida and the Keys!
Southern Florida Tour
Dates: April 18-26, 2026 (nine days, eight nights)
Cost: The total per person is $3,850 for a double occupancy room. If you would like a private room, the single supplement is $900.
A $500 nonrefundable deposit to reserve your spot with the balance due on March 1, 2025.
Guide: Peter Burke
Highlights:
Experience southern Florida during spring migration!
See nesting Wood storks, herons, egrets and other waders up close.
We’ll seek out the endemic Florida Scrub-Jay and many more regional specialties.
Explore Everglades National Park with its endless grasslands hardwood hammocks.
Visit Dry Tortugas National Park, home to the only Brown Noddy colony in North America and an exciting spring migrant trap.
Enjoy a relaxed pace tour as we journey from Miami to Key West!
Rocky Mountain Birding tours are small and fill quickly!
Book today! Please click on the button below and complete the simple form based on your birding interests. We will be in touch to walk you through your birding or wildlife adventure of your choosing!
Learn More:
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Included:
Guided birding for 9 days.
Lodging for eight nights at TBD.
Meals beginning with dinner on the first night through breakfast on the last day.
Transportation including airport pickup and drop off.
Optics – I will have a Kowa 99mm scope available throughout the tour.
NOT Included:
Flights to and from Miami International Airport (MIA).
Lodging/Meals prior to or after the tour dates: April 18-26.
Personal items such as alcohol with meals, laundry, etc.
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Saturday, Apr. 18 – Arrive in Miami – night in Boca Raton
Plan to arrive at Fort Lauderdale Hollywood International Airport (FLL) in the afternoon. I will meet you in the airport and we’ll check into our lodging for the next two nights in Boca Raton.
Sunday, Apr. 19 – North Miami Birding – night in Boca Raton
This morning we’ll visit the Wakodahatchee Wetlands and have spectacular, close-up views of Wood Storks, Anhingas, Great Egrets and other wading birds on their nests along the boardwalk. We should see Purple Gallinule, Gray-headed Swamphen and other South Florida specialties at this location. In the afternoon, we may visit nearby Green Cay Nature Center or Loxahatchee NWR, or depending on time, we may head straight to the Hungryland Wildlife Center to search for two highly sought after target species: Red-cockaded Woodpecker and Bachman’s Sparrow.
Monday, Apr. 20 – South Miami Birding – night in Key Largo
Today we’ll focus on areas south of Miami and around Homestead. Depending on weather, we may start the day on the southern tip of Key Biscayne at the Bill Baggs Cape Florida SP, which can be hopping with migrants if the winds are right. Another option, if migration is slow, would be to seek out some of Miami’s infamous exotics such as Red-whiskered Bulbul, Chestnut-fronted Macaw, Spot-breasted Oriole, Egyptian Goose, Scaly-breasted Munia, Lilac-crowned Amazon and assorted parakeets.
Tuesday, Apr. 21 – Everglades NP and Homestead area – night in Key Largo
This morning we’ll visit Everglades National Park, making stops along the main park road at such well-known places as Anhinga Trail, where the common glades residents are often just a few feet off the boardwalk, and Mahogany Hammock with its collection of tropical hardwood trees, colorful land snails and often migrant warblers. At Flamingo, we’ll scan mudflats for shorebirds and terns, possibly including Marbled Godwit and Gull-billed Tern along with the local “Great White” Herons. Nearby Eco Pond has a small island favored by roosting waterbirds often including Roseate Spoonbill and White Ibis, and the pond itself often attracts migrants. For the past several years small numbers of Shiny Cowbirds have frequented the parking lot area, and with luck we’ll have excellent views of this scarce invader from the Caribbean. If we’re lucky we might find an American Crocodile or West Indian Manatee.
Wednesday, Apr. 22 – Northern Keys – night in Key Largo
After breakfast we’ll begin to explore the keys, looking for migrants as well as residents like Black-whiskered Vireo, the notoriously skulky Mangrove Cuckoo or perhaps the Cuban subspecies of Yellow Warbler.
Thursday, Apr. 23 – Middle Keys – night in Key West
Friday, Apr. 24 – Dry Tortugas NP – night in Key West
We’ll sail at 8:00 a.m. for the Dry Tortugas National Park aboard the Yankee Freedom III. Once on the island, we’ll have about four hours to take in scene, especially the Sooty Tern and Brown Noddy breeding colony. Careful scanning might turn up a rare Black Noddy. Inside Fort Jefferson, we’ll look for migrants that can include thrushes, buntings, orioles and 20+ species of warblers. The fort is often patrolled by Peregrine Falcons and/or Merlin. Other possibilities include Cave Swallows around the battlements of the fort, a Chuck-will’s-widow inside the old powder magazine or a Short-eared Owl perched in one of the trees on the parade ground.
On our return to Key West, we’ll look for Masked Boobies on Garden Key and check the buoys for loafing Brown Boobies or Roseate Terns. The trip to and from the fort crosses a deepwater channel where we might also see Bridled Terns, Northern Gannet, jaegers or even an Audubon’s Shearwater. We’ll return to Key around 5:00 p.m. with time for a quick shower followed by a great seafood dinner.
Saturday, Apr. 25 – Key West birding and farewell dinner – night in Key West
This will be a flexible day. Depending on winds, overnight migration can be heavy, or sometimes the opposite is the case. Fort Zachary Taylor SP is a great place to start the day, but we’ll go where the birds take us!
In the evening, we’ll celebrate our week together with a final dinner on the island and then take in one more dazzling Key West sunset.
Sunday, Apr. 26 -- Departures. Book afternoon flights home as we’ll be birding our way north from Key West today! If we haven’t connected with a White-crowned Pigeon, Black-whiskered Vireo or Mangrove Cuckoo, we’ll make a final try for them as we make the 120-mile journey back to the mainland.
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