
Millers Rest Area |
Overview
This is one of the most amazing birding sites in all of
Nevada, but it is disguised as ordinary roadside rest area, and most
birders wouldn't recognize its value. Many places have been described
as islands of green vegetation in a sea of dry desert scrub, but
Millers defines what that really means. The rest area is in the bottom
of a broad, flat valley sparsely covered by miles of saltbush in every
direction. The valley is surrounded by mountains, but they are so far
away as to be unnoticed from the rest area. The rest area has many
trees and a lawn that is heavily irrigated every night. For migrant
birds trying to fly across this inhospitable land, Millers must shine
like a beacon on a dark and stormy night. |

The lawn. |
Link to Map.
Description
Millers is a typical roadside rest area with flush
toilets, shaded picnic tables, drinking water, trees, and a small lawn
area. The highway entrance and exit are at the same point, so the road
through the rest area makes a loop. When you first drive in, you arrive
at the rest rooms, lawn area, and the largest of the trees. To exit the
area, you drive around a loop with picnic tables and trees, but no
lawn, inside the loop. Off the far (west) end of the loop, a gravel
spur road leads a few yards to a parking area for overnight campers.
There are a few more trees and some irrigated shrubs around the
perimeter of the camping area. The restroom area is lighted at night,
which makes it a good place to watch bats and nighthawks. Commercial
trucks park across the highway, so the area is relatively quiet. |

Trees and picnic tables. |
A remarkable variety and density of unusual resident,
migrant, and accidental species are regularly seen here during the
spring and fall migrations. At other times of year, you might see a
house sparrow or two; but it is always worth the time to stop and
check. Bird the tall trees and the lawn, plus the trees, water faucets,
fence posts, telephone poles, and open skies around the rest area. Be
sure to check the shrubs around the restrooms for skulkers.
Location
Millers Rest Area is located on Highway 95, about 3
hours north of Las Vegas. From Las Vegas, drive north on Highway 95 to
Tonopah. From the intersection of Highway 6 and Highway 95 in downtown
Tonopah, drive north on Highway 95 for another 13.3 miles (15 minutes).
The rest area is on the north (right) side of the highway and is well
signed; you can see it from miles away (GPS coordinates:
38.141ºN, 117.453ºW; 4,820 ft).
Hours
Always open. The restrooms are always open, and they
even broadcast Nevada Public Radio 24 hours per day.
Fees
None; even the camping area is free. |
| No photo. |
Specialties
This is a good place to bird during migration -- it
seems that everything shows up here including waterbirds (herons and
kingfishers), raptors (falcons, accipitors, harriers, buteos), Mexican
species (Hepatic Tanager), Eastern species (Hooded Warbler, Least
Flycatcher), shorebirds (peeps of various types), montane species
(Mountain Chickadee), exotic species (House Sparrow, European Starling,
Eurasian Collared Dove), migrants (Yellow-breasted Chat, Lincoln
Sparrow, Rufus Hummingbird, MacGillivray's Warbler), and even a few
desert species (Western Kingbird, Say's Phoebe, Sage Thrasher,
Black-throated Sparrow, House Finch). |
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Trip Notes
September 7, 2003
We were up at sunrise and greeted by a typically pleasant,
cool, and sunny desert morning. We started birding early, but
things were quiet with only a few warblers in the trees. About
an hour of so later, while we were fixing breakfast, the birds
started to arrive or became active. About then, Jack and Greg
showed up, and we'all birded for a couple of hours. The birding
was good, but not great, although we did see a Least Flycatcher,
which was a good eastern bird to see. We left 1030 hours and headed
for home.
Birds of the day: Say's Phoebe, European Starling, Brewer's
Blackbird, Yellow Warbler, Brown-headed Cowbird, Belted Kingfisher,
Lincoln sparrow, Sage Thrasher, Western Kingbird, Chipping Sparrow,
Savannah Sparrow, gray and Hammond's flycatcher, Northern Harrier,
Common Raven, Barn Swallow, Common Yellowthroat, Warbling Vireo,
Least Flycatcher, Rufus Hummingbird, MacGillivray's Warbler, Mountain
chickadee, House Finch, Lazuli Bunting, Orange-crowned Warbler. |