Thursday, 21 April 2016

Tanzania - the 'Big Five' x 2

The months March, April and May provide some of the year's best birdwatching in the Algarve. It can be a very busy time for us. In most years we also try to fit in to this period a tour in some other part of the world for Avian Adventures so it's a good thing that there are two of us!



This year we are even busier than ever, partly as a result of having not one but three Avian Adventures tours to lead during this period. It's little wonder that we haven't had much time to add to this blog!



Our last blog post was about our tour in Costa Rica, a trip that we were able to enjoy together. Since then, June has been guiding in the Algarve while Peter has been leading a tour in Tanzania and next week starts another one in Arizona.



Included here are some photographs from Tanzania - two versions of the 'Big Five' that were seen during a tour that included Tarangire, Lake Manyara, the Serengeti and Ngorongoro Crater.  We have blogged before after previous tours in Tanzania (e.g. here, here and here).  We can't recommend this tour highly enough; it provides one of the world's great wildlife spectacles.



The 'Big Five' mammals are those regarded by big-game hunters as the most difficult to hunt on foot although, of course, we like to do our hunting with binoculars and camera.  Our 'Big Five' birds are just some of the larger species seen during the tour, included just for fun!



Wednesday, 9 March 2016

Costa Rica with Avian Adventures

We have recently returned from leading another AvianAdventures tour, this time in Costa Rica.  This was Peter’s 15th time in Costa Rica and June’s 3rd visit to what is definitely one of our favourite wildlife destinations.  Not only is it a wonderful country for birdwatching but the variety and numbers of mammals, reptiles, amphibians and butterflies means that there is seldom a dull moment. 
 
Violet Sabrewing

On this occasion we worked with local guide, Erick Castro, whom we have known for many years and who was really good at sorting out the many confusion species – we put our hands up and admit that Yellow-bellied, Yellowish, Yellow-margined and Yellow-olive Flycatchers, Yellow, Yellow-bellied and Yellow-crowned Tyrannulets can still sometimes be a bit of puzzle, particularly if they are feeding high in the forest canopy!

Chestnut-mandibled Toucan
 Silver-throated Tanager
 Baltimore Oriole
 Blue-grey Tanager
Montezuma Oropendola

After a night in San José on arrival we began the tour on the Caribbean side of the country, staying at the excellent Selva Verde Lodge, situated on the bank of the Rio Sarapiquí.  From there we visited La Selva Biological Station, one of the most important sites in the world for research on tropical rain forest.  For the first-time visitor to Costa Rica, starting a tour here with such an array of tanagers, orioles, toucans, woodcreepers, hummingbirds and flycatchers to contend with can be a mind-boggling experience!

Rio Sarapiquí

Next we had two nights at Arenal Observatory Lodge, still on the Caribbean slope and situated right next to the Arenal volcano.  Arenal is 1,633 metres (5,358 ft.) high and last erupted in 1968 but it is currently inactive.  It seemed strange to see Great Curassows visiting feeders here but in recent times this has been become their regular daily habit whereas previously they were birds we simply hoped to get a quick glimpse of in the forest.

 Arenal
Great Curassow

On the Pacific side of the country we had two nights at La Ensenada Lodge in the dry Guanacaste province.  The lodge is situated on the coast of the Gulf of Nicoya but as well as coastal birds such as Brown Pelican and Magnificent Frigatebird it offers many species of the surrounding dry tropical forest and there are also wetlands, notably saltpans with hundreds of gulls, terns and waders.  Birding the saltpans was like home from home and several of the species seen were those familiar from Europe such as Ruddy Turnstone and Grey Plover.  There were also Whimbrels and Sandwich Terns and we have blogged before here about these possible splits.

 La Ensenada Lodge
Hudsonian Whimbrel
White-necked Puffbird

From La Ensenada we visited Hacienda Solimar, primarily a huge cattle ranch but also a wonderful wetland with thousands of birds.  They were impossible to count but there must have been at least 5,000 Black-bellied Whistling-Ducks and as many Cattle Egrets as we have ever seen.  The highlights, however, were the much smaller numbers of Jabirus, Limpkins and Snail Kites.

 Hacienda Solimar
Jabiru

From La Ensenada we headed south, joining the Inter American Highway for a while on our way to Hotel Villa Lapas.  We stopped briefly in Puerto Caldera where we searched through flocks of Laughing Gulls looking for a Franklin’s and were surprised to find instead a first-winter Sabine’s Gull, possibly the least expected bird of the whole tour.  In the same place were 100 or more Black Terns, migrants heading north to breed.

Hotel Villa Lapas is conveniently situated close to Carara National Park and we made several visits there. Carara lies only about 90km west of San José and because of that attracts many visitors, especially at weekends.  For the general tourist here the American Crocodiles and the Scarlet Macaws are particular features and easily seen but we were more intent on seeing Antthrushes, Quail-Doves, Tinamous and Manakins along forest trails.

Scarlet Macaws

Also in this area we had an excellent afternoon boat trip on the Rio Tárcoles, looking for the specialist birds that occupy the mangroves and also seeking out the elusive American Pygmy-kingfisher.  River boat trips are always popular and usually present really good opportunities for photography.

 (Mangrove) Yellow Warbler
American Pygmy-kingfisher
Boat-billed Heron

Next we moved to the mountains, to Savegre Hotel Nature Reserve & Spa in the Cordillera de Talamanca.  Both at the hotel and at Paraíso Quetzal Lodge, our lunch stop on the way there, hummingbird feeders were a main attraction with Fiery-throated, Magnificent & Scintillant Hummingbirds, White-throated Mountain-gem and Green Violetear among the species to been seen.

 Fiery-throated Hummingbird
Birding above Savegre

A trip higher up the mountain to about 3,400m above sea level took us to a habitat described as sub-alpine tropical rain paramo.  It was obvious that one or two of our group didn’t feel particularly happy at this altitude and this was also the only time during the tour that we really experienced anything like serious rain.  However, we stuck it out and it wasn’t long before the sun re-appeared along with our target bird, the Volcano Junco.

Volcano Junco

The must-see bird in Costa Rica is the Resplendent Quetzal and the male certainly lives up to its name with its iridescent green and red plumage, extraordinarily long upper tail coverts, a helmet-like crest and a yellow bill.  We left it very late but we did eventually see one in the San Gerardo Valley, near Savegre.  It would have been hugely disappointing had we not seen one but with close to 400 other bird species seen and a mammal list that included Margay, Northern Tamandua, Hooded Skunk, Honduran White Bat, Mantled Howler Monkey and two species of Sloths we don’t think anyone would have returned home feeling anything but delighted by their Costa Rica experience.

 No new photos of Resplendent Quetzal - this one from 2006!

Thursday, 18 February 2016

Falkland Islands - 5

From Bleaker Island we transferred to Weddell Island, the third largest in the Falklands archipelago.  We were expecting a direct flight from one to the other but instead we had five flights!  We went from Bleaker to Stanley, then to Mount Pleasant, from there to Darwin, then to Sea Lion Island and finally to Weddell.  At each stop we either picked up or dropped off passengers or bags and sometimes mail or supplies of food.  Working out the FIGAS flight schedules can’t be an easy job!

Weddell Island is situated to the west of West Falkland.  It has an area of 265.8 square kilometres and a coastline of about 175km.  The highest point (Mt Weddell) is 383m above sea level.

The plan was for us to have just one night on Weddell but the weather intervened and instead we had two nights.  It was windy but otherwise the weather on Weddell itself wasn’t too bad at all, it was fog around Stanley that prevented planes from taking off.  This surely made scheduling the flights even more difficult!  For us it just meant that we could see a little bit more of the island but with no roads we weren’t able to go very far!

Our accommodation on Weddell

We were also able to enjoy more of the excellent hospitality of Martin & Jane Beaton who I have seen frequently in the past at the Rutland Water Birdfair.  Martin and Jane are the only inhabitants of Weddell Island and after ten years have learned from necessity to turn their hands to an infinite variety of tasks.  Martin is an accomplished chef, an artist, an expert fisherman and something of a raconteur. On Weddell he has also become a capable mechanic and engineer as well as a sheep and cattle farmer!  Jane, too, has learnt over the years to turn her hand to the 1001 tasks essential to life on a remote island.  It was a bit strange finding these two familiar faces in this distant location in the South Atlantic!

For some reason the Patagonian Grey Fox, native to Chile and Argentina, was introduced to Weddell in the late 1920s.  On a couple of occasions we were able to watch a family of them chasing each other around.  What impact these aliens have on Weddell and its wildlife is unclear but there were plenty of birds on show and lots of young penguins.

Patagonian Grey Fox

As many as 54 bird species have been recorded on the island.  Those we saw included Falkland Steamer Duck, Southern Giant Petrel, Black-crowned Night Heron, Turkey Vulture, Falkland Skua and several more that were by now quite familiar.  It was the Gentoo Penguins that received most of our attention and it was interesting to see how quickly they came out of the sea onto the safety of the beach whenever a Sea Lion came close.  Young Gentoos constantly chased their parents begging for food.

Turkey Vulture

Falkland Skua

Upland Goose

Kelp Goose

Black-crowned Night Heron

Falkland Steamer Ducks

Southern Giant Petrel

I think I would have to say that it was the penguins, all five species of them, that have left the most lasting impression from this trip.  It would be nice to think that before long I might have the chance of another visit to the Falklands and perhaps an opportunity to see some of the other islands such as Carcass, Sea Lion and Saunders.  And, of course, I still need to see Cobb's Wren!



Gentoo Penguins

Thanks again to Tony Mason, to the Falklands Island Tourist Board and to everyone in the Falklands who contributed to making the trip possible. 
  

Wednesday, 17 February 2016

Falkland Islands - 4

From Pebble Island we flew next to the much smaller Bleaker Island located close to the south-east coast of East Falkland. This long, thin, low lying island covers just 2,070 hectares. It was previously known as Long Island and was referred to as such on the chart compiled by the Beagle survey of which Charles Darwin was a part in 1834. Later it became Breaker Island but since at least 1857 it has been called Bleaker.


The island has been a sheep farm for over 100 years and is now privately owned and under organic sustainable management. Wildlife and domestic animals appear to co-exist quite happily and there are attempts being made to restore some of the tussac grass habitat that has been lost through over-grazing in the past.

Here we were the guests for just one night of the owners of the islands, Mike & Phyll Rendell. We stayed in very nice accommodation in Cassard House built as recently as 2011 with solar-powered underfloor heating and hot water and triple glazing.

 Cassard House


Like Pebble, Bleaker has been designated an Important Bird Area. It has 40 species of birds breeding including Gentoo, Magellanic, Southern Rockhopper and the odd pair of Macaroni Penguins and a large colony of Imperial Shags. Watching the Rockhoppers at Long Gulch was one of the highlights of the whole trip and at the same time countless Imperial & Rock Shags were flying in and landing on nearby cliffs. Pale-faced Sheathbills and a Striated Caracara ignored us completely, coming within just a metre or so, sometimes too close to photograph.

 Rockhopper Penguins

 Imperial Shag

 Rockhopper Penguin

 Pale-faced Sheathbill

 Rock Shag

 Rockhopper Penguin

 Peale's Dolphins

 Striated Caracara, known locally as Johnny Rook

Bleaker is one of the islands where in the past rats have been accidentally introduced and now threaten ground-nesting birds. It is hoped that eventually they can be eradicated and bird populations restored to former levels but in the meantime we saw only a small number of Tussacbirds (Blackish Cinclodes) and there are no longer any Cobb’s Wrens to be found although we were told that they are present on the nearby rat-free islands, North Point, Halt and Sandy Bay.

Tussacbird

What I particularly liked about Bleaker was that I needed to walk only a short distance from the accommodation to get to the nearest Rockhopper colony and hundreds of Imperial Shags. What a great way to start the day!