
I was out walking and photographing wildflowers at Southwest Williamson County Regional Park when a movement in the grass caught my eye. A Greater Roadrunner (Geococcyx californianus) — not an unusual sight on the Texas trails I frequent — but this one carried something I had never noticed before: a vivid band of orange blazing behind the eye, as if someone had painted it there just for the occasion.
That splash of color, I would soon learn, is a seasonal secret. During breeding season, male Greater Roadrunners reveal a striking postocular stripe of bare skin just behind the eye — a wash of electric blue nearest the eye, deepening into bright orange toward the back of the head. It is essentially a biological billboard: this gentleman is open to courtship.
He was also carrying something in his beak: an insect, dangling like a little gift waiting to be delivered.

And a gift is exactly what it was. Greater Roadrunners are well-known among ornithologists for nuptial gift-giving, in which the male catches a morsel of prey and presents it to a potential mate as part of his courtship ritual. Insect, lizard, or small snake — the larger the offering, the better his chances. Female roadrunners can be surprisingly discriminating: a modest insect may earn little more than a polite glance, while a heartier prize carries far more persuasive weight. My gentleman, it appeared, was starting negotiations.
I had assumed he was alone. I had seen a solitary roadrunner in this same meadow on a previous bike ride and thought nothing unusual of it. But after a minute or two, a second roadrunner stepped out from the tall grass, and suddenly the whole scene snapped into focus.
The male launched into his full performance. He fanned his long tail open in a dramatic arc, bowed forward, and circled his companion with the slow, deliberate confidence of someone who has rehearsed this moment. According to ornithologists, the display also involves side-to-side tail wagging and low, mechanical cooing sounds, though I was too absorbed in the visual spectacle to register anything but the movement.
The female watched him with an expression that I can only describe as politely unconvinced. She stood her ground in a meadow blazing with Indian Blanket wildflowers — those vivid red and gold blooms so characteristic of a Texas spring — while he put everything he had into the show. That look on her face, composed and faintly skeptical, told the whole story without a single feather ruffled. She was, in every sense of the phrase, playing hard to get.

Greater Roadrunners are believed to mate for life, renewing their bond each spring through exactly this kind of elaborate courtship. What I witnessed that morning was likely one of many rounds in a much longer negotiation. Pairs also chase each other on foot, approach one another carrying sticks or blades of grass, and engage in ritual bowing and tail-wagging — a full choreography of devotion.
The little love dance played out for about ten minutes while I photographed from a respectful distance. Eventually, the female turned and crossed a shallow stretch of water on the trail. The male followed close behind. I let them go.

One last note: the header image — that regal bird gazing skyward in the golden light — is very likely the female. No orange or blue postocular stripe is visible, and in a breeding male, that blazing color would be hard to miss. Perhaps she had already been sizing up the situation long before the dance even began.
Some photographs carry a soundtrack. When I read about the Greater Roadrunner’s courtship ritual — the bowing, the slow, deliberate circles, the carefully chosen gift — I heard music. Specifically, I heard Ivan Lins, the great Brazilian composer and singer, whose song “Love Dance” seemed made for exactly this moment: a wildflower meadow, a patient female, and one very determined male giving everything he had. For readers who have followed Through Brazilian Eyes, you may recall my “Music to My Eyes” challenge on Lens-Artists Challenge #297. This will not come as a surprise. Some moments are not just visual. They are a feeling, a mood, a soundtrack.
That is the story behind the shots. If you liked this post, you may also be interested in others featuring Bird of the Week, Greater Roadrunner, Parks, Southwest Williamson County Regional Park, Texas, and Wildlife. Until the next time, keep clicking and capturing the beauty your eyes find.
Posted for I.J. Khanewala’s Birds of the Week Invitation CLXX.
Post for Pepper’s One Step at a Time #11.
Sources:
- Cornell Lab of Ornithology, All About Birds — Greater Roadrunner — https://www.allaboutbirds.org/guide/Greater_Roadrunner/lifehistory
- Audubon Field Guide — Greater Roadrunner — https://www.audubon.org/field-guide/bird/greater-roadrunner
- Animal Diversity Web — Geococcyx californianus — https://animaldiversity.org/accounts/Geococcyx_californianus/
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Pepper
The images are wonderful and the story that goes along with them is fantastic. You witnessed such special moments. 😊
Egidio Leitao
Thanks, Pepper. They were very far, but I knew that was very special and had to do my best.