Mags

Mags Holloway is a Texas-based birder, photographer, and former environmental consultant with more than three decades of field experience across the state. She specializes in woodland birds and behavioral observation and is rarely in a hurry. Mags prefers binoculars to hashtags, field notes to hot takes, and believes the best bird photos usually happen when no one else is watching. Author Bio Mags Holloway has been birding Texas for over 35 years, from the deep Pineywoods to the coastal prairies and everywhere in between. A retired environmental consultant, she spent much of her career walking land that most people drove past, learning to read habitats and the birds that depend on them. Now based in East Texas, Mags focuses on careful observation, seasonal patterns, and bird behavior, often pairing her writing with photographs that favor honesty over perfection. She does not participate in social media and believes good birding happens away from screens. Her work for TexasBirder.com is written for readers who enjoy learning, laughing a little, and slowing down enough to actually see the birds.
3 Posts
Field Notes From Someone Who Was There

Field Notes From Someone Who Was There

Learned the hard way, remembered the next time.The field is a remarkably efficient teacher. It doesn’t explain itself. It doesn’t slow down so you can catch up. It simply lets you get things wrong, sometimes repeatedly, until you either notice or move on. I’ve done both, though not always in the right order. Most of what I know about birds didn’t come from books or charts. It came from standing in the wrong place, at the wrong time, with too much confidence and not enough patience. The field has a way of correcting that. I once spent an entire morning…
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Texas Birds, No Hurry

Texas Birds, No Hurry

Birding at the speed the birds prefer. Texas is large enough to make people feel rushed. There’s always another county, another hotspot, another direction you could be driving if you weren’t standing where you are. I’ve felt that pull more times than I can count. The urge to cover ground, to “make the most of the day,” to treat birding like a task list instead of an experience. The birds have never shared that urgency. Some of my best mornings in Texas have involved very few miles and even fewer species. A patch of woods. A fence line. The edge…
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I Didn’t Start Birding to Be Impressive

I Didn’t Start Birding to Be Impressive

I didn’t start birding to build a list, collect accolades, or prove anything to anyone standing next to me on a trail. I started birding because one day I realized I was seeing birds but not actually seeing them. That moment usually sneaks up on you. For me, it happened years ago on a job site in East Texas. I was supposed to be evaluating land. Instead, I stood there far too long watching a bird flick its tail, drop to the ground, hop back up, and repeat the whole routine like it was trying to explain something important. That…
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