2025 Florida Keys and Everglades Trip

by Kyle W on October 1, 2025
Birding

Last weekend, I went on a birding trip to the Florida Keys and the Florida Everglades. My goal was to explore the area and discover new bird species. Spoiler alert: I did find new birds! This was the first multi-day birding trip I've taken.

I covered Miami-Dade, Monroe, and Collier county.

Lucky Hammock (Frog Pond WMA)

Not gonna lie, when I first pulled up to this birding "hotspot", I thought this place was some sort of joke. It was just a barren stretch of road with power poles.

Road
Road
Sign
A sign (feat. my shadow)

I was really surprised when I heard a lot of bird songs. There were a lot of birds, other wildlife, and at least 2 other birders.

Lizard
A lizard
Stray dog
Stray dog

Here are the new species I've never seen in my life:

Loggerhead Shrike
Loggerhead Shrike
Common Yellowthroat
Common Yellowthroat

Blue Grosbeak
Blue Grosbeak (pretty sure?)

And here are some other birds that I have seen before.

American Crow
American Crow
Northern Cardinal
Northern Cardinal
Common Ground-dove
Common Ground-dove
Two Swallow Species
Barn Swallow and Purple Martin

This is now probably one of my favorite birding areas. According to eBird, people have found way more epic birds like the Scissor-tailed Flycatcher and Summer Tanagers. Bruh, why can't I find these birds?!! I'll be back here sometime.

Big Pine Key - The City

There were lots of wild chickens everywhere on this island. They were really cute.

Chickens
Chicken

I couldn't take pictures of all the chickens, but a lot of them had mixed coloration like the rooster here on the left. There are crazy mutts.

Key West

There are chickens on Key West as well! The chickens here are scavengers and eat anything. I fed an enthusiastic hen a peanut right outside Five Guys. The chickens here are quite alert and hyperactive compared to farm-raised chickens.

I also saw a Eurasian Collared-dove here. I took a picture of it with my phone. If you zoom in, you can see that it's significantly more blurry than photos from my camera.

Eurasian Collared-dove
Birb

I then visited the Butterfly & Nature Conservatory. They had a lot of really cool exotic birds (and butterflies, I guess). Sadly, these birds don't "count" because they are not wild.

6 Pictures of Birds at Butterfly Exhibit
List of birds at the butterfly exhibit.
There were also mandarin ducks and
flamingos.
Opal-rumped Tanager
I found it. These birds were unusually
tame with about 30 people in the indoor
area walking along.

Long Beach Trail (Key Deer NWR)

Returning to Big Pine Key, I decided to check eBird for some nearby hotspots and gladly came across this location. The trail here was so unmaintained that it was impossible to complete it. That was fine though, as I got to add more species to my life list. A Palm Warbler hung out just a few feet away from me and was not scared of me at all. Later, a Key Deer decided to hang out a few feet away. Apparently, the wildlife here is not scared of humans. I'm not really sure why. The Blue-winged Teal and White-crowned Pigeon are both new species I've never seen before.

Blue-winged Teals
Blue-winged Teals. These ducks just look surreal! I can't believe they actually exist.
Tricolored Heron
Tricolored Heron
Great Egret
Great Egret
Belted Kingfisher (bad pic)
Belted Kingfisher (bad pic sorry)
White-crowned Pigeon
White-crowned Pigeon
Palm Warbler
Palm Warbler
Palm Warbler
Palm Warbler (again)
Shell
Some shell
Dragonfly
Some dragonfly (I'm not an insect-ologist!)
The moon
kyle.ro website hosting location (real)
Key Deer
Key Deer, curious
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher
Blue-gray Gnatcatcher
Tricolored Heron
Tricolored Heron (different one)

None of my photos are edited, so if they appear more grayscale and bland then what you're used to, that's normal! I understand that technically the camera itself "edits" the photos already, as it's really just picking up light levels on a sensor and converting that into an image file, but that's besides the point. My camera can't shoot in RAW sadly.

Florida Panther NWR

I made it back to the Florida mainland. Unfortunately, I forgot to bring bug spray, so I got tens of mosquito bites and had to exit the park before I could really start birding. I found one new species, the ovenbird. I also got poison ivy rash from this hike. I'll come back here another time, better prepared.

Ovenbird
Super blurry but... NEW BIRD!
(Ovenbird)
Birding balcony
In the 5 minutes I spent at this spot, I saw
1 blue jay and some unidentifiable ducks

More birds

On the drive home from Miami, I saw some more birds. At a rest stop, I counted around 65 vultures.

Black vultures
Black vultures
Hawk on sign
Hawk near Big Cypress NP

Overall, this trip was completely worth it. It was over the span of 2 days and I probably spent $150 max for everything (gas, parking, food, and butterfly garden entry).

New birds:

I hope to return to the Everglades soon! Maybe next month.

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