Week two saw us in Montenegro staying just outside Budva in Becici, So would the bird sightings improve...... not a lot! We did quickly add Common Buzzard to our list, seen patrolling the mountain ridge visable from our hotel room.
Not a great photo, but it was a fair distance away. There seemed to be many more Hooded Crows here than up in Croatia,
Grey Wagtails were pretty common too:
But otherwise out and about not much else was seen, although going out for a walk we did find a Coal Tit and a female Blackcap, neither of which allowed me to photograph them.
On a visit to the old town of Kotor we again came across Grey Wagtail and 3 Common Kingfishers together which was great, but none of them would perch for a photo, this was the best I could get:
Our final day in Montenegro was an exdcursion to Lake Skadar bordering Albania, this included a couple of hours out on a boat on the lake, always a good thing, we were looking forward to this, with high hopes of adding Dalmatian Pelican to our life list.
Things got off to a great start as we chugged along a river before heading out onto the lake,
A Marsh Harrier (unless anyone tells me differently, not a great shot as it was in the sun and silhouettted)
Greay Heron,
Yellow Legged Gull,
Great Crested Grebe, there were hundreds of these on the lake, never seen so many,
Black-headed Gull,
and our first ever Pygmy Cormorant,
plus some very smart Great Egret.
But no sign of Dalmatian Pelicans! So just have to have a close up of a Pygmy Cormorant instead.
So eventually the boat made its way back, then many miles away I could see what looked like Storks circling over a hillside, on closer inspection they turned out to be Pelicans, miles away but it is our first ever glimpse:
We went for a stroll after the boat trip and found some Common Kingfisher, but they wouldn't stop for a closeup! We did find these which was very nice:
This water snake scooted by us at speed and quickly disappeared into a crevice in the rocks
So that was Montenegro.... from a wildlife viewpoint!
Sunday, 23 October 2016
Saturday, 22 October 2016
Croatia & Bosnia
We have just come back from a two non-birding holiday to Croatia and Montenegro. Of course we always hope that while we are out and about we will see something interesting, on that score we were to be disappointed with week one, the Croatian leg of our trip.
We saw very little, although Yellow Legged Gulls were in abundance,
and a White Wagtail was seen regularly from our hotel balcony.
We did see plenty of House Sparrows, Hooded Crow, the odd Robin and Jay, a Collared Dove or two, plus of course Great and Blue Tits. A highlight was a couple of Common Kingfishers at our local harbour (Mlini, near Dubrovnik) and also at nearby Cavtat. Oh and a Sparrowhawk at Mlini too. No photo's of these I'm afraid as we were in tourist mode at the time, with the wrong lens on the camera for birds.
One of our boat trips out did produce this:
on the same trip to the Elafiti Islands we did come across another couple of birders in a park on the island of Lopud and they told us we had just missed a Firecrest, that would have been a lifer for us, we hung around for a while, though we thought we might have seen it, whatever we saw was too flighty to identify, so there's one that got away!
We did venture into Bosnia and Herzegovina to visit Medjugorje and Mostar where Grey Wagtail, Lesser Black Backed Gull and Mallard extended our bird list. As we headed back to Croatia we stopped at Pocitelj to look at the castle and came across another Sparrowhawk and a Jay.
Our last day out on the Croatian leg of our journey was in Dubrovnik, the day started OK and we took the water taxi from Mlini to Dubrovnik, big mistake! The weather turned very windy and as you may guess the water taxi is quite a small boat, and half way there the sea became a tad rough! So much so the skipper asked us all to move to the port side of the boat to balance out against the waves that were hitting us on that side. We elected to come back by local bus!
The weather in Dubrovnik became increasingly worse and we did the tour of the city walls mostly in torrential rain, although I'm pretty sure with the prevailing winds and weather that meant I think we saw a Cory's Shearwater come out of the gloom do a couple of circuits off shore then disappear again. This would have been a lifer but Tina only caught the briefest glimpse and I couldn't be sure. It wasn't a gull that's for sure.
So that sums up Croatia for birding on this trip, disappointing but it wasn't that kind of holiday.
I'll just add a few more Yellow Legged Gull photos from a feeding frenzy after out skipper chucked the left overs from lunch overboard:
We saw very little, although Yellow Legged Gulls were in abundance,
and a White Wagtail was seen regularly from our hotel balcony.
We did see plenty of House Sparrows, Hooded Crow, the odd Robin and Jay, a Collared Dove or two, plus of course Great and Blue Tits. A highlight was a couple of Common Kingfishers at our local harbour (Mlini, near Dubrovnik) and also at nearby Cavtat. Oh and a Sparrowhawk at Mlini too. No photo's of these I'm afraid as we were in tourist mode at the time, with the wrong lens on the camera for birds.
One of our boat trips out did produce this:
on the same trip to the Elafiti Islands we did come across another couple of birders in a park on the island of Lopud and they told us we had just missed a Firecrest, that would have been a lifer for us, we hung around for a while, though we thought we might have seen it, whatever we saw was too flighty to identify, so there's one that got away!
We did venture into Bosnia and Herzegovina to visit Medjugorje and Mostar where Grey Wagtail, Lesser Black Backed Gull and Mallard extended our bird list. As we headed back to Croatia we stopped at Pocitelj to look at the castle and came across another Sparrowhawk and a Jay.
Our last day out on the Croatian leg of our journey was in Dubrovnik, the day started OK and we took the water taxi from Mlini to Dubrovnik, big mistake! The weather turned very windy and as you may guess the water taxi is quite a small boat, and half way there the sea became a tad rough! So much so the skipper asked us all to move to the port side of the boat to balance out against the waves that were hitting us on that side. We elected to come back by local bus!
The weather in Dubrovnik became increasingly worse and we did the tour of the city walls mostly in torrential rain, although I'm pretty sure with the prevailing winds and weather that meant I think we saw a Cory's Shearwater come out of the gloom do a couple of circuits off shore then disappear again. This would have been a lifer but Tina only caught the briefest glimpse and I couldn't be sure. It wasn't a gull that's for sure.
So that sums up Croatia for birding on this trip, disappointing but it wasn't that kind of holiday.
I'll just add a few more Yellow Legged Gull photos from a feeding frenzy after out skipper chucked the left overs from lunch overboard:
Saturday, 24 September 2016
Sunday, 18 September 2016
A Milestone at Upton Warren
In Wednesday last week we made an afternoon trip to Upton, hoping that the Bairds Sandpiper had not been disturbed by the work being done at the Flashes. Luckily for us the work was hardly noticeable, with just a bald head popping up out of the reeds every now and then.
The Sandpiper showed really well, but never got very close;
The milestone mentioned in the title, well that's out 800th species since we started recording what we have seen. I have to say though that if someone hadn't worked out what this bird was and we had been on our own, I would probably have put it down as a Stint. Still struggling with wader identification, especially in non-breeding colours.
A real highlight of the day, was from a bird that both Tina and me love, and that's the Curlew. There were a group of about 20 in front of the hide, calling quite often, which for us is one of the best avian sounds that there is;
Another great bird showing well was the Ruff, very busy fattening up,
There were also a few Snipe about,
The last couple of Avocets were also pretty busy,
Lapwing and Teal numbers were up from our last visit back in July with the Lapwings making a circuit now and then. After a couple of hours we decided to have half an hour at the Moors before heading home for tea.
We went straight to the Water rail hide hopefully for the Kingfisher and even before I sat down Tina saw it on one of the branches over the water, but he flew off just as I go the camera pointed. Never mind at least we had a good view. Otherwise it was quite quiet, adding Cormorant, Common Sandpiper, Little Grebe and Swans to our sightings for the day.
As always visiting Upton is a real pleasure, we keep saying we must get there earlier, perhaps this week?
The Sandpiper showed really well, but never got very close;
The milestone mentioned in the title, well that's out 800th species since we started recording what we have seen. I have to say though that if someone hadn't worked out what this bird was and we had been on our own, I would probably have put it down as a Stint. Still struggling with wader identification, especially in non-breeding colours.
A real highlight of the day, was from a bird that both Tina and me love, and that's the Curlew. There were a group of about 20 in front of the hide, calling quite often, which for us is one of the best avian sounds that there is;
Another great bird showing well was the Ruff, very busy fattening up,
The last couple of Avocets were also pretty busy,
Lapwing and Teal numbers were up from our last visit back in July with the Lapwings making a circuit now and then. After a couple of hours we decided to have half an hour at the Moors before heading home for tea.
We went straight to the Water rail hide hopefully for the Kingfisher and even before I sat down Tina saw it on one of the branches over the water, but he flew off just as I go the camera pointed. Never mind at least we had a good view. Otherwise it was quite quiet, adding Cormorant, Common Sandpiper, Little Grebe and Swans to our sightings for the day.
As always visiting Upton is a real pleasure, we keep saying we must get there earlier, perhaps this week?
Saturday, 27 August 2016
Thailand, Koh Samui & Bangkok
We have just returned from 12 days in Thailand, this wasn't a birding/wildlife holiday. We were on the island of Koh Samui for a wedding and had only two free days there, so we used them to see as much of the island as possible and hopefully any bird life along the way, which to be honest wasn't much! Having looked up before hand and emailed some locals it was soon apparent that this was the worst time of year for birding unless going to specialist areas, which we didn't have time to do.
Things started well at Bangkok Airport while taxiing in and out. The airport has lots of wide channels between the taxi ways and runways, these are full of Egrets (Great & Little), Black-winged Stilt and Cormorant.
Even though are hotel was quite rural, on the beach but with woodland behind it, we didn't see much.
Common Myna were everywhere
and Oriental Magpie-Robin put in regular appearances. We did see one Olive-backed Sunbird in the Hotel gardens, but that was our only sighting. I was surprised that we never saw a single sea bird, not even in the distance and nothing on the shore line either, the wedding was fantastic though and that was the reason we were there.
As I said we did have two days out on the island, we hired a taxi both of the days to take us around to the various sights. We did come across some birds on these trips;
White-bellied Sea Eagle,
a bit of a distant poor shot I'm afraid,
Pacific Reef Heron,
Brahminy Kite, White-vented Myna, Zebra Dove,
Large Billed Crow, Asian Glossy Starling,
Chinese Pond Heron,
Tree Sparrow and Red Jungle Fowl.
(The Pacific Reef Heron, White-vented Myna and Zebra Dove were lifers so can't complain!)
Koh Samui Airport gave us our last species for the island as we driving out to the aircraft, a Paddyfield Pipit.
Our plan for Bangkok was definitely sight seeing and to this end we had booked a number of trips.
Our first was in Bangkok, visiting a number of Temples to see the Golden Buddha, Reclining Buddha and the White Marble Temple. So no birds on the menu although we did see lots of Common Myna, Sparrows and Feral Pigeon, then at the end while waiting with our guide for the vehicle to pick us up two Little Heron put in an appearance.
This was a half day trip so after lunch we went for a walk in the local park, just 10 minutes from our hotel.
This provided more Little Heron, Common and White-vented Myna,
Oriental Magpie Robin and Long-billed Crow, but added Spotted Dove, Coppersmith Barbet, Common Iora and White-throated Fantail.
The fantail being a new species for us.
Next day we were up very early as we were going to the River Kwai, this turned out to be a very moving and sobering experience. It did provide us however with a few more birds for our trip as well.
We added, Greater Coucal, Green Bee-eater, Indian Roller, Lesser Racket-tailed Drongo, Grey Sibia,
Asian Openbill, Red Turtle Dove,
Pied Myna
and Asian Golden Weaver.
With the Sibia, Drongo and Weaver being added to our life list.
Our next trip out that bought some birding results was out to the temples at Ayutthaya, we added, White-throated Kingfisher, Intermediate Egret, Black Shouldered Kite, Javan Pond Heron,
Asian Openbill
and House Swallow to the list as well as seeing the more common birds. The Javan Pond Heron was the lifer among that lot.
Our final new bird for the trip was an Oriental Turtle Dove sitting on a wire outside our hotel room window!
We had a great time, with great food, great sights and a few great birds thrown in a total of 45 species seen with 10 lifers, I know that's not a lot for a country that boasts around 800, but that wasn't the goal for our time there.
Things started well at Bangkok Airport while taxiing in and out. The airport has lots of wide channels between the taxi ways and runways, these are full of Egrets (Great & Little), Black-winged Stilt and Cormorant.
Even though are hotel was quite rural, on the beach but with woodland behind it, we didn't see much.
Common Myna were everywhere
and Oriental Magpie-Robin put in regular appearances. We did see one Olive-backed Sunbird in the Hotel gardens, but that was our only sighting. I was surprised that we never saw a single sea bird, not even in the distance and nothing on the shore line either, the wedding was fantastic though and that was the reason we were there.
As I said we did have two days out on the island, we hired a taxi both of the days to take us around to the various sights. We did come across some birds on these trips;
White-bellied Sea Eagle,
a bit of a distant poor shot I'm afraid,
Pacific Reef Heron,
Brahminy Kite, White-vented Myna, Zebra Dove,
Large Billed Crow, Asian Glossy Starling,
Chinese Pond Heron,
(The Pacific Reef Heron, White-vented Myna and Zebra Dove were lifers so can't complain!)
Koh Samui Airport gave us our last species for the island as we driving out to the aircraft, a Paddyfield Pipit.
Our plan for Bangkok was definitely sight seeing and to this end we had booked a number of trips.
Our first was in Bangkok, visiting a number of Temples to see the Golden Buddha, Reclining Buddha and the White Marble Temple. So no birds on the menu although we did see lots of Common Myna, Sparrows and Feral Pigeon, then at the end while waiting with our guide for the vehicle to pick us up two Little Heron put in an appearance.
This was a half day trip so after lunch we went for a walk in the local park, just 10 minutes from our hotel.
This provided more Little Heron, Common and White-vented Myna,
Oriental Magpie Robin and Long-billed Crow, but added Spotted Dove, Coppersmith Barbet, Common Iora and White-throated Fantail.
The fantail being a new species for us.
Next day we were up very early as we were going to the River Kwai, this turned out to be a very moving and sobering experience. It did provide us however with a few more birds for our trip as well.
We added, Greater Coucal, Green Bee-eater, Indian Roller, Lesser Racket-tailed Drongo, Grey Sibia,
Asian Openbill, Red Turtle Dove,
Pied Myna
and Asian Golden Weaver.
With the Sibia, Drongo and Weaver being added to our life list.
Our next trip out that bought some birding results was out to the temples at Ayutthaya, we added, White-throated Kingfisher, Intermediate Egret, Black Shouldered Kite, Javan Pond Heron,
Asian Openbill
and House Swallow to the list as well as seeing the more common birds. The Javan Pond Heron was the lifer among that lot.
Our final new bird for the trip was an Oriental Turtle Dove sitting on a wire outside our hotel room window!
We had a great time, with great food, great sights and a few great birds thrown in a total of 45 species seen with 10 lifers, I know that's not a lot for a country that boasts around 800, but that wasn't the goal for our time there.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)