Sunday, December 23, 2012

231 : White-browed Coucal


White-browed Coucal - Centropus superciliosus

We are into the last week of 2012 and I am making a mad effort to try and post up every last bird I saw this year so that I can start the year really hungry for new photographs. It has been a fantastic year for photographs with at the current count 177 species added to the list. Thats more like one every other day than a daily bird but its still a huge number of mostly new birds. When I birded an annual list in the UK I would be lucky (with some very mild birding) to see 130-150 species in a year. I didn't twitch - I just went out to see what I could see. So in that context I have had my fill of birds and rather than ending up with a list on a piece of paper and the anxiety that I have to repeat the whole thing bird for bird next year I can be content that the main effort will be with things that are new - but also getting better pictures of those birds already in my collection. Thats a good challenge and keeps the camera interested.

I have seen Coucal's all over India and I wasn't suprised to bump into them again in Africa. They are clumsy big noisy birds that crash through the bushes and trees. Related to cuckoos but not in the habit of parasiting nests with their young. They make a living on insects but some of the larger species will also take mice, small lizards and even snakes. There are 122 species in the wider cuckoo family for me to collect over time. Coucals are easy to spot - they bluster into a bush more like a gorilla than a bird. Hardly the most subtle of woodland specialists.

Lake Manyara, Tanzania
July 2012

Saturday, December 22, 2012

230 : Verreaux's Eagle-Owl


Verreaux's Eagle Owl - Bubo Lacteus

I always feel incredibly lucky when I stumble across an owl. This bird stood a good 70 cm tall - thats a big owl. The largest of all African owls in fact. It had a very distinctive face with the black edge and then those heavy pink eyelids - it really did look sleep deprived but then it had decided to roost up under the thin branches of an old tree right next to the main thoroughfare in the Park. Despite its size I had to have it pointed out to me. We probably all drive past an owl every day.

This is a true apex avian predator. They will kill and eat all other owls ! Mongoose, monkeys, gennets, bustards, storks, herons,  young vultures from the nest, eagle chicks (after chasing off the parents), secretary birds, hornbills (no !!) and cranes - as well as the normal hares etc. 

Lake Manyara, Tanzania
July 2012 




229 : Emerald-spotted Wood Dove


Emerald-spotted Wood-Dove - Turtur chalcospilos

I am still literally wading through a the many pictures I took of life ticks on that first afternoon's game drive at Lake Manyara. I could have stopped the the safari truck every 20 yards. I am sure for a couple of hours I decided with Jane that I could not photograph everything so bird after bird was falling through the net.

The thing about taking pictures as I go along actually does give me the sense that I can really tick the bird and almost tuck it an albulm for posterity like a stamp. This is a pleasing little wood dove - identified by its range as I cannot see the diagnostic back. It doesnt have a black bill or a yellow tipped red bill either - this is more grey. Thats rules out next door neighbour wood-doves the Blue-Spotted or the Black-billed. So a nice piece of book work a couple of days before Xmas and a dove thats new to me just stumbled over in the 1000 or so pictures from Lake Manyara. Mine forever.

July 2012

228 : Sacred Ibis


Sacred Ibis - Threskiornis aethiopicus

I thought a typical Manyara shot might be nice for a change - a small number of skittish Zebra, Yellow-billed stork and then the Sacred Ibis working through the grass feeding on insects or worms.

The ancient egyptians worshiped these birds as symbols of one of their god's Hoth and even mummified them for burial. I can remembber seeing Ibis marking in the hyrogliphics on the columns at the temple site at Karnac. I think the egyptians were close to their wetland birds. Hunting ducks and pigeons on punts with throwing sticks and bows and arrows. They are apparently doing well these days spreading around the globe out of their African/Middle Eastern heartland.

At the end of the same game dive we came across a large group of elephants and learnt about their ear waggling agressive displays. I am not sure if I could tell when they are for show and when they are about to charge.



Lake Manyara, Tanzania
July 2012

227 Saddle-billed Stork


Saddle-billed Stork - Ephippiorhynchus senegalensis

A huge bird standing 1.5 m tall with a 2.4 m wingspan - the saddle being the bright yellow "shield" at the top of the bill. I nevet got a close up view of these birds which was a shame. This is a blow up of a bird perhaps 800 m away wading on the edge of Lake Manyara.

Tanzania
July 2012

226 : Tawny-flanked Prinia


Tawny-flanked Prinia - Prinia subflava

It took me an age to confirm this identification using a field guide and a process of elmination. I worked my way through 30 Cisticolas before I strayed into the Prinias and realised a number of features that were diagnostic showed up for this Tawny-flanked bird. The eye, supercilium and line right through the eye with the pale buff lores underneath did it for me. The tail is in a strange position as it was flicking it probably. So a little bit of book work to get to this which is satisfying.

Lake Manyara, Tanzania
July 2012


225 : Ring-necked Dove


Ring-necked Dove - Streptopelia capicola

The wing pattern is different from collared dove and the neck marking. Doves deserve a second look.

Lake Manyara, Tanzania
July 2012

224 : D'Arnaud's Barbet


D'Arnaud's Barbet - Trachyphonus darnaudii

Tricky to seperate from Usambiro Barbet but I am doing it here on range and my guide Gregory was clear that the birds at Lake Manyara were D'Arnaud's Barbets. If you want to see my Barbet collection tap in the magic word in the top right search box. I am proud of these !





Tanzania, Lake Manyara
July 2012

223 : Southern Cordon-Bleu


Southern Cordon-bleu - Uraeginthus benglaus

A stunning and strange colour to see on any bird. Almost dipped in child's paint.

Tanzania, Lake Manyara
July 2012

222 : Southern Red Bishop


Southern Red Bishop - Euplectes orix

Its a stretch to identify these from the female birds - the range is right and I will update if I find I am wrong later. I am 90 % sure that these are Southern Red Bishops

Lake Manyara, Tanzania
July 2012

221 : Blue-naped Mousebird


Blue-haped Mousebird - Urocolius macrourus

I didn't manage to get a decent picture of this delightfully named bird - relatives of the Trogons which are very exotic and waiting in the rain-forest for me at some point along with AK47 armed rebels, ebola and leaches. Deep joy. My perceptions need to change altogether if I am going to head into the congo. Some of my birds will not be within easy reach of an Oberoi hotel or a 5 star safari lodge.

Lake Manyara, Tanzania
July 2012

Wednesday, December 19, 2012

220 : Crested Guineafowl


Crested Guineafowl - Guttera pucherani 

These are a little less reptilian than the Helmeted Guineafowl which was the other species of Guineafowl we saw in Africa this Summer. These are a "shaggy crested forest Guineafowl" as opposed a bald fleshy casqued Gunieafowl I guess. Bizzare birds - I have to stray up into Kenya at some point in search of the Vulterine Guineafowl - a bird possessed of a naked blue head and neck and scrawny composure barely mitigated by an attractive feather boa round the neck of the male bird. Who knew there was so much diversity within 1000 miles with Guineafowl.

You can see that this is a very early morning shot caught with a flash. As its picture "number 1" this was the first bird on our early morning game drive the night after a spectacular fairy light lit forest meal. Our tree cabins were gorgeous and it was a shame we opted for one night but it was prohibitively expensive so we did it as a start of holiday treat to get us in the mood.

I will get back to my habit of spreading the love away from birds -



I am not sure what flavour of Mongoose these are but they were comical little things. They scurried around in family packs of perhaps 20 animals. Apparently the leader - an older male has the most dangerous job. After a sprint across any open space such as a road or clearing he will turn back and sit up to keep watch and also to make sure that there are no stragglers from the group. They live in a high state of tension as animals their whole lives. Apparently the life expectancy of the old sentinals drops dramatically after they take on the extra responsbility - a suicide mission no less acting as a decoy for every hungry eagle, snake or small hunting cat in the neighbourhood. I grew quite fond of these creatures. A road crossing was always a fun and somewhat frenetic event. This guy has a couple of helpers auditioning for the job - waiting for the inevitable day when there is a shadow cast over his silvered fur and then no more - job done for a few weeks - the youngsters all across the clearing safely. Its a strategy I guess - not one I approve of as a middle aged man but there you go. You would have thought he could see out his twighlight years in peace and let the youngsters take a few risks. I like him - a risk taker for the good of the tribe. I expect he earns "favours" from the role so his genes survive even if his life expectancy drops - so perhaps not such a stupid strategy.

July 2012
Lake Manyara, Tanzania

Sunday, December 16, 2012

219 : Lilac Breasted Roller


Lilac-breasted Roller - Coracias caudata

This is everyone's top safari bird. Not for their rarity but just because in the light they give off a technicolour display of dazzling beauty. I will rename them Joseph birds.I am mopping up the Safari with shorter pieces to get all the remaining species logged and up. I want to enter the new year fresh. I can always come back to the library and add some thoughts on the bird later.

I would add this - some of the birds you see daily on safari you tend to think that you will always have a chance for a better shot. It is a fatal error. Hopefullly this is a bird that will follow me on my African travels and I can improve on this offering.

Tanzania - various sites
July 2012

218 : Grey Crowned Crane


Grey Crowned Crane - Balearica regulorum

Out on the edge of Lake Manyara - my first Crane species in the wild. These are a favourite in zoos and wildlife collections for obvious reasons. A quintissential (sp ?) African bird.


Lake Manyara, Tanzania
July 2012

217 : Two-banded Courser


Two-Banded Courser - Rhinoptilus africanus

Coursers are clearly related to Pratincoles, my first encounter with which took place at the Pivot Fields in Dubai earlier in the year where I chanced across a small delightful flock of Collared Pratincoles. If you look at my previous post you can see that I was "salivating" over the different species I might see in Africa once I got to Tanzania. As things stand I saw the one species but it wasn't a disapointment. A real beauty - also called Double-banded Courser in some textbooks with a different latin name (Smutsornis) I will have to let that issue go for now and sort it out later.

These birds are listed as "Least Concern" on the Bird Life interntional. That means a stable population trend (no decrease of greater than 30 % in 3 years or 3 generations). Also a stable population - that means a population of over 10,000. I am pleased with this photo which really shows of the crisp scalloped or scaled edges to the wing feathers and the clean black breast bands. This is a handsome bird. The eye ring and large dark eye complete the portrait.

This species is a shore bird. They spend their days hiding in the shade and become active in the twighlight hunting insects over the sand, short grass and salt pans. Unlike Praticoles which hunt on the wing  the "Coursers" hunt their prey mainly by foot and that makes sense if you compare the leg length between this species and the Pratincole that I have linked to earlier in this piece.

Lake Manyara, Tanzania
July 2012

Thursday, December 13, 2012

216 : Madagascar Squacco Heron


Madagascar Squacco Heron - Ardeola idae

Collecting is my theme today. The joy of a little collection. Another type of of Squacco Heron - much more stripey. It has an overlapping range in Africa with the "Common" Squacco Heron which I posted up in the last week. These birds don't breed on the African mainland but single birds visit in the Summer months in the Northern hemisphere. I was probably lucky to see this. "fairly regular" is a euphamism - thats not ''common''.

I have had a good burst of posting this morning. I couldn't sleep and got up at 4.15 am - 3 1/2 hours later the NDB counter has lept foward by 4 birds and I have some learnt some stuff. Time well spent and it frees up lunchtime for some Xmas shopping and a Fatburger in the Mall. Oh how proud of this posting I will be as I sit in my rocking chair at 90. I have new posting technique - bang up 5-10 pictures and draft posts without texts and from the pc and then I can actually fill in the odd posting wherever I am. Its the delay loading up the pictures that takes the time - the chore as it were. Unfortunately I have taken to reading my posts from every bird of a certain family so that slows me down. I wander in my library and get lost in Sri Lanka or get lured into the Karnataka Hills. Its been a good year ! Some solid work done on the Task. I am not birding every free moment - but I am chalking some good ticks and shots with some intense weekends and mornings. I have probaly only spent the equivalent of 2-3 weeks of freetime in the field, if that and a week of that was family holiday. I have probably spent more time coaching and watching junior rugby with the odd game refereeing at tournaments etc. so it isn't taking over. We do of course spend 5/7ths of 11 months in our places of work. I personally spend 1/24th of all my time as a minimum eating.   

162 birds this year in 2012. I didn't hit any targets and the Bird Rate has gone nowhere. I probably got slowed up by the amount of time the posting has taken from the India and Tanzania trips - I am nowhere finished with the African shots and  still have quite a few Dubai shots tucked away. Posting is almost becoming a limiting factor as I do go on.

75 of you read this a couple of days ago. I think I will have 1000 hits this month (and not mine as I can filter those out). Its in the top 50 birding websites in the world by traffic can you believe although I have not linked it to Fatbirder as yet (yes there is a bird portal named after my favourite burger chain). So in number terms I am happy - but I would be happy with 5 people reading or even noone but Mrs C and just 5 more birds if they were good ones. Like this. Taken during one of the most intense 20 minutes of watching stuff in my life !

I asked my son if he read my blog - Nah I don't really like birds as much as you do he said. Fair enough. Perhaps the younger one will take to reading it as he gets older. It is really just something for me but I do like sharing the pictures and a few thoughts. 

I think I might "go dark" until after Xmas and focus on getting ship shape for the holidays at work and at home. I will spend some time sorting through the remaining pictures and then spend one day posting everything thats left from 2012 prior to the New Year - start 2013 naked of birds in my little stash !! That will really drive me out of the door. I am not sure what I still have tucked away. In the words of Sir Brucey though "didn't he do well". Pat on the back for me - 162 birds ! Thats a new one on average every 2.5 days which is lot better than 2012. And what birds. 

I'd like to get one of those rolling slide show things on the top of the page. A bit of a redesign - and a travel map ?? So much I could do. Still its working as it is. Posting about posting - you know you have doen enough for a day when it introverts like that. Have a good Xmas - feed those birds !   

Lake Manyara, Tanzania
July 2012


215 : Fork-tailed Drongo


Fork-tailed Drongo - Dicurus adsimilis

Skitting round my tent on safari. Weaving through the acacia chasing large flying insects. A black beetle eating acrobat.

Mara River, Tanzania
July 2012

214 : African Grey Hornbill


African Grey Hornbill - Tockus nasutus

Gregory our driver for the first 4 or 5 days of our holiday stopped to let us take some shots of something as we were driving from Arusha across the plain to the descent into the Great Rift Valley. I managed to get a shot of this hornbill which I identifed later from a book with a little help from Gregory. The beauty of the digital camera is that you can get off a snap and then blow it up on a screen and get the field guide out.



Even from this shot you can see how far the bird was away and bins and books are a bad mix.

The thing I love about this site now is that I am starting to get a handle on Hornbills. I know a few of them. We are getting there !  5 out of 54 species ! I have "collected" Indian Grey, Southern-Ground, Malabar Pied and Van der Decken's along with this African Grey Hornbill. If you search the site - tap in Hornbill in the box you'll get a little list of my Hornbill collection. Try Barbet ! its ace. I never thought I'd get this far and I have got nowhere - its all shaping up nicely though.

Road to Lake Manyara, Tanzania
July 2012

213 : Olivaceous Warbler


Olivaceous Warbler- Hippolais pallida

I am scared of warblers. Scared of getting them wrong. Scared of making a fool of myself. Scared of being ridiculed in years to come for being amateur with my Acrocephalus, lightweight with my Locustella, silly with my Silvia or just failing with my Phylloscopus. I am easily critcised for my spelling - the fundementals of identification though. These are not easy birds. The Old World warblers are a collection of nuanced individuals - washes, tones, tints, lower mandibles, leg colours, primary projections. I need a better book to really get stuck into Old World Warblers.

I have been toying with the idea of Handbook of the Birds of the World. At 200 euros a volume with 16 volumes it kind of goes down on the list with ''new car'', or ''holiday''. I had one volume in my hand though on a trip to London - I snuck into Foyles the bookshop and there were 4 or 5 assorted volumes at the reasonable price of GBP 189 each. Most were shrink wrapped in plastic but the one I got to get a look at was fantastic. Perhaps 600-700 birds for each volume by family with a coloured plates, distribution maps, behavioual treatments. The first handbook of a complete class of any animal in the world - how fantastic is that. The good news is that it is leaping into the world of the digital next year and for a subscription I can raid the goody jar without denying the children education, running water or any other civil right. There is something madly wonderful about having a shelf with a single book though that deals with every bird in the world. Victorian ! I love collecting.

I love old print shops with the old coloured engravings of birds. The smell of them. There is one near covent garden that I found last Christmas - you could spend hours in there. I am a sucker for bird prints, photos, anything that records or seeks to understand or "capture" a bird. If I could come back in another life I would be Doctor Maturin in the Jack Aubrey novels - if you want a taste I have linked to some great little quotes from the man himself. "Jack you have debauched my Sloth'', the crew loved him , Aubrey is of course Cochrane the fanous fighting captain of the early 19th century very loosely - Maturin is a more complex amalgam - part O'Brien himself - if you are a film person thats the lengthy series of novels that the single film Master and Commander is based on (Peter Wier the filmmaker but Patrick O' Brien the novelist). Maturin wanders the oceans on a Royal Navy frigate, part Irish radical, part British intelligence officer, ships surgeon, polymath, natural historian but clearly the first world birder. Read the synopsis of him on Wikipedia and you just want him to be real. There is no room for travelling the world on a frigate for 4 years anymore and discovering a new tortoise while combating Napoleon with your surgeons tools and rapier - railing against flogging and then classifying a new beatle. The Victorian collector and amateur enthusiast. If you don't fancy a life at sea then the 18th century vicar come naturalist Gilbert White of Selbourne fame provides another more bimbling model. He studied a local patch watching the comings and goings, the minutiae of the hedgerow, the music and rythym of nature as he did his pastoral rounds, no doubt in fetching stockings and a favourite battered hat. Doctor Who - Doctor Who fits the type !  The English amateur scientist or observor. We have of course just lost Sir Patrick Moore. He belonged to a different era (link here to the bizzarre - but its the way most of knew him  from childrens television  rather than from the Sky at Night !!).  A ''Steam Punk'' of the highest order. Whats the gist today ? Collecting and classifying - hobbies and interests. Napoleon might have written off Great Britain as a nation of shopkeeprs but as anyone knows there's detail in retail to be sifted and pondered. Weighed out, put on a shelf, valued, owned, books to be kept. A beautiful end in itself. Amateur archeology, botany, astronomy, gardening, sailing, cooking, woodworking or trekking. It just isnt the detail of the Grande Armee that captured Napoleon down to every button and coat lapel. He decided to take on a nation of thugs and street brawlers led by amateur hobbyists. To join the elite that built the British empire then do build your bridge or settle your case but then bake a cupcake - Just get on with it. Get some silly kit, hats are good, books are good, but doing is better - it doesn't have to go anywhere. Its a diversion but then it becomes the point.  

Anyway we have a problem with this identification as Olivaceus Warblers are migratory as I think of them and this was July in the Great Rift Valley. I am hanging my hat though on a small note in Birds of the Western Paleartic - "African populations sedentary at South of Range". Much of what is written about birds is written with a European bias. I am sure that some Olivaceous Warblers do stay put. So there we have it. I am looking at a plate that could almost be the shot above - "long bill, flat crown,  short wings and sturdy legs... dull grey or brown above and dull white below...dull supercilium (thats the stripe above the eye)...brighter eyer ring (that isnt quite catching on this shot)...pale edges to inner flight feathers (have a look at the leading edge of the wing)..." That doesnt take us too much further but I am sure this is a Hippolais warbler and by the distribution maps in my East Africa Birds textbook I have two options - Olivaceous and Icterine. I am hopeful that in July there would be no confusing passage birds to mess me up on that. Icterine is just far more yellow on the front which leaves me by elimination with this fellow. But I will never 100 % know and that almost bothers me. Short of a DNA test I stand no chance to be 100% sure with dozens of birds. The Victorians shot them and kept their skins - measured every feather and compared and contrasted. Skins would go around the world being swapped and studied by collectors. You can still go out to a place in Hertfordshire and see the trays and trays of bird skins in the collection of the Natural History Museum - collected by Stephen Maturin - well in my imagination.  

Nowadays we have books, the net, thousands of sites and experts online more than happy to tell you you are wrong. As I have said before if I ever get to a few thousand birds on here I will link the site somewhere mainstream and then let them all come pouring in to dispute my identifications.


While we are in the Nineteenth Century or indeed outer space with our daily Zeitgeist I leave you with a  beautiful picture of an Impala - my impala portrait. It isn't hanging on my wall and I have no trays of skins - just pictures and memories. This is my Natural History Library - I did threaten to pin a butterfly on a board once - Mrs C wasn't happy - that makes NDB even more important as it will be the only record bar a few notebooks of what an earth I have been up to all this time ! I am looking foward to reading this all over in my 90's and laughing at my amateur mistakes. I am categorically not putting myself up there with Doctor Who or Sir Patrick Moore - but they are good role models - interested travellors - I am just aspiring to take a few shots and on a daily basis build up a picture of what might be out there and see a few new places along the way.

I am in discussion with another Yoderish bird guide from Islamabad - its cold up there so I'll need a puffer jacket and a waterproof cover for my next field guide - perhaps a map of the foothills and some new boots ? Ah expedition coming on....I have a price for the vehicle and driver, a date, a location and a reason to do it - random !!

Lake Manyara, Tanzania
July 2012


Tuesday, December 11, 2012

212 : Yellow-billed Stork


Yellow-Billed Stork - Mycteria Ibis

At the Hippo pools at Lake Manyara. I have written about this spot quite a bit.

 
Its unusual to see Hippos out of the water in the day time. There was so much gointg on around us at this half an hour stop I am sure that I missed quite a bit.
 
Lake Manyara, Tanzania
July 2012


211 : Squacco Heron



Squacco Heron - Ardeola ralloides

There is a secret place to birdwatch in Dubai tucked away in International City (AKA sh*tty City as it is locted next to one of the major sewage works. There was a great plan to build luxury houses next to their own bird reserve with a lake etc.  The lake has thrived abandoned as the housing development was shelved. It is a real gem - bunk over the fence (more like wander through the giant hole) and you are in your own little private Barn Elms or Minsmere. I have only ever seen a security guard once who getsured that I should leave. I smiled and waved my binoculars at him - "Thank You" - "Lovely Spot" I said and wandered on like an escaping British Officer from Colditz. The only other person I have seen - thats a lie two people - were birders. Serious types with bins and cameras like me.




So there is the frisson of naughtiness with busting into what is a private site. A bit like scrumping apples from a garden (the apples were always rock hard weren't they - plus we had our own apple tree so why oh why did I bother ?). There is I am sure a nesting colony of these delightful little herons. Fish arrive as eggs stuck on bits of plant matter in the feet of birds or ducks - I never knew that could happen until recently. Talapia apparently will colonise new water by catching a lift - amazing !!

So here we are - a development gone wrong - a secret little idyll. Squacco a-go-go. It smells a bit - Sh*tty City you see - perhaps not a good place for million pound houses next to the blue collar accomodation with clothes hung to dry out of the windows. Nice idea though.

Warsan Secret Lake, Dubai
December 9 2012.




Saturday, December 8, 2012

210 : Snipe


Snipe - Gallinago gallinago

Got some super shots of this shy and retiring little wader this morning at the Pivot Fields.


I think they are quite Christmassy. Not on the plate mind you.

Pivot Fields, Dubai
8 December 2012




209 : Temmick's Stint


Temmick's Stint - Calidris temminckii

The Pivot fields in Dubai is an important overwintering and migration stop off on the great fly way between Africa and Central Asia - the Stans. Recently they seemed to have ripped up the turf - I am not sure why. The exposed earth has a number of free standing pools from a recent downpour and the irrigation. The site normally grows turf commercially.

Stints are tiny little waders - smaller than a sparrow. There were a large number of these birds across the site today on an early morning drop in - along with 3 Sociable Lapwing so I updated post 67 with some better shots of this rarest of birds.

Pivot Fields, Dubai
8 December 2012.

208 : African Paradise-flycatcher



African Paradise-flycatcher - Terpsiphone viridis

Seen on the drive in to the Lake Manyara Tree Lodge. So apt.


Mrs C being paid back for a Thompson's holiday to Mallorca (resort was next to the Bocca Valley and Albufera which in birding terms must be Medina or the Dome of the Rock). Anyway she earnt this the day we turned up at a resort challet with iron bedsteads with a metal mesh base. No kiddies club disco at 6 pm at this place populated by people with tattoos and shaven headed kids. Just the noisy C's - well noisy Neil over excited.  



Fairy land with Paradise Flycatchers snoozing in the trees nearby.


A fitful night listening to lions roar - at the least the bed was comfy - please note that the rules at these places if you have children means that all romance is substituted for an 8 year old - as children  under 14 I think cannot share !! Sammy and I rolled down the window flaps and I sat up editing pictures - c**ping myself. I hadn't seen a lion yet and as far as I was concerned one was on the porch - it was disconcerting,



Sunbreak over the rift valley ridge. Paradise

Lake Manyara, Tanzania
July 2012




Friday, December 7, 2012

207 : Spotted Morning-Thrush


Spotted Morning-Thrush - Chichladusa guttata

This is a bird that I identified from my books on my return. I have written a lot recently so I will just bang up the photos to get the number up. The 10 or so posts before this have a lot more Daily Neil musings - but mostly just Olakira withdrawal.

Cried the other night at Attenborough at 60 - the one about how we have mucked the planet up. Proper tears. The elephant in the room is whether this is one of his last little series - it does look like a retrospective. There he is though in his little boat bimbling along in Borneo....sixty years ago he starts... camera zooms out to show modern day oil palm plantations. What will be left in even 20 or 30 years. Lets buy Borneo - all of us. 100 pounds each - every birder in the world (1 million). Lets just buy the rest of the rainforest - the whole flipping thing. Then Papua New Guinea, whats left of the middle of Mindanao in the Philipines. Lets not bail out Greece - lets bail out the rain forest before its too late.  

Curry tonight from the Ruppee room and a batman film. You see there is some balance in my life. My eldest has just suggested a game of scrabble while the younger is off at a sleep over - is Bimble a word ?? It should be - I love bimbling.

Tanzania, Serengeti, Mara River
July 2012

206 : White-headed Vulture



White-headed Vulture - Trigonoceps occipitalis

I am not making this one up am I. A vulture with a white head. Baraka our guide at Olakira (added a link because someone has just put up some amazing shots on Trip Advisor of cheetahs and river crossings etc - they had a blast just in the last 4 weeks !) hadn't seen one close to camp before. They are solitary birds and the least common of the large vultures in Africa. So a good find ! Check out the red and blue bill.

It was good to see Baraka get excited about a bird but I was excited about every bird. In fact I was just exicted and relaxed all at the same time. Trundling around in a safari vehicle just inhaling nature has to be one of the greatest things to do of an afternoon on the planet.

I am wondering how many more pictures of birds I have  as I think I might run out of things to say !  I know I saw close to 100 species in Tanzania but I am not sure how many seperate shots I got.

Olakira is heaven. The Mara river is heaven on earth. The camp moves but when its right by the river you can literally sit with a beer and watch the elephants pottering along next to the river. The wildebeest teeming over the crest of a hill. Giraffe running, loping across the plain. Its almost too much and I already know I have to go back to that exact spot several times to get it out of my system.



I am definately getting out there with a camera tomorrow early and getting some shots of good old UAE birds - I am turning into a pale man, brooding in my villa about the African bush when I have the Hajar mountains and the Empty Quarter a couple of hours drive from my front door - and a perfectly decent 4 x 4 to go there in. I promise a change back to some desert birding very soon - or a trip up to the turf growing site that is Dubai's mecca. What I might do is a little bird race and see how many species I can get in a day and photograph, irrespective of whether I have seen them before. A little trip to the UAE bird forum is always a good way to prod yourself out of the door. Look at these guys getting pumped about missing a bird for their UAE list ! There are some hard core birders out there daily - and what I am doing - wasting away fretting about the one that got away - Secretary bird. I have some clear targets and the clock is ticking. Life goes on. Oh I wish it didn't though. A bit like your wedding day - you have to pinch yourself and remind yourself to take it all in.

What a gift we have though these days to win back some space - time, money, jet travel, the net, books, decent binoculars, affordable cameras. Just a little bit more of an idea of what to do with our time. We've never had it so good - birders that is. You could get a flight for 250 quid from Stansted, a  2 star hotel for 40 a night and get yourself up into the Atlas mountains looking for a Lammageier. I'm off on one again.

I think I am going to pump up this site by a few hundred birds next year - one way or another it would be good to head off for a thousand because if I commit to that then I am commiting to happiness and interest and heathy air and adventure. Thats what it is - its adventure. Its so missing from our lives. I see pictures on the web of an old friend doing these races where he crawls on ice under an electrified wire. I get it - I couldnt do that now but I get it.

I have tried other ways to get my kicks - thats me on the floor with the bald patch and the dotty red scarf at 40. A repeat visit as well. There has to be a better way !!!



I think its the birds for me now. I've done the adrenalin thing - expectation and wonderment - thats enough adventure now.

Mara River, Tanzania, Serengeti
July 2012

205 : Brubru



Brubru - Nilaus afer

I heard a scurrilous rumour through Mrs C that someone has jokingly accused me of making this stuff up. Cutting and pasting shots from the web - perhaps I could even try and hoax a few bird names while I am at it. Gregarious Mountain Lark, Oscilating Blue Charmer, Pugnacious Fluffbird, Zinging Spirit Thrush.  I'll try and slip one in and see if its spotted. But not today ! Really - its a real bird.

I was not confident of the identification of this bird but  my first best guess was a Chin-spot Batis (Really !!! They are tie-dyed) and I was 80 % sure. I could not find another candidate in the field guide for East Africa. The white wing panel and overall combination of white, red, black and grey, size, range, bill were all right. The eye should be yellow though. Perhaps that was just not showing. I was kidding myself - a yellow eye will show - This shot was taken from about 150 m. I was sat feeling very smug in the porch of my tent and along this bird bimbled. A Chin-spot Batis but with the wrong colour eye. You have to be hard with yourself. This is serious stuff.

Then at the bottom of a plate of "Black Boubous" (Again really !!!) I found the Brubru. A small black and white bush-shrike that is common in the acacias of Africa. On the money - The supercilium the untidy panel in the wing - the more bricky red flank and the black eye. Hidden at the bottom of a page in a family of 1 tucked between Black Boubous and Pufbacks (of course - havent you heard of them either ??). Of course ! A Brubru - see them featured regulary on Discovery or Animal Planet. Had a whole hour long feature of them once !?!

This then was the view from my tent - a huge sky and yet another african bird mystery solved - another unbelievable name.  I bought a wide angle just for this shot. The birds then came to me. Silly names and all.



Olakira Camp, Mara River, Serengeti, Tanzania
July 2012

Thursday, December 6, 2012

204 : Fischer's Lovebird


Fischer's Lovebird - Agapornis fischeri

I expect I should say something meaningful about the pet trade today but after my revelation that Mrs C has a bird order list including diminuative falcons I haven't got a leg to stand on (see last post - its a joke). Its easy to see why someone would want to capture these and put them in a cage. Thankfully there is a wild population of 250,000 + of these birds in the wild although quite local in East Africa. There is a ban on taking them from the wild and exporting them. I think they are bred now in captivity so hopefully all is good.

We stayed in a budget lodge, the "Bouganvillia'' the night before and after we did our day's safari into the Ngorogoro crater. Apart from feeling stressed by the staff scrumming to carry bags and waiting from about 5 am to try and be the bag carrier right outside my chalet door the place was cheap and cheerful and clean and friendly. We had to tell the boys to stop staring at what I presume was a pygmy lady who was waiting on tables but then again she might just have been very short. You know what children are like.

The roofs of the chalets were tiled and under the eves there was a world of nesting possibilities. A small colony of these Lovebirds had taken up residents and noisily clattered about the place squabbling over tenancy rights and perching rights or whatever else there was to argue about. I didn't manage I think to get a shot of a Lovebird next to zebra or perched near a crocodile. We are so used to seeing parrots and the like in cages or Paraketes roaming our cities that we forget they have a home - a wild home. They aren't pets. My mother in law has an African Grey Parrot who is the funniest bird alive - stills swears at the dogs and mimics my Father in Law a couple of years after he passed away - "Bloody Dogs". His little green mate Rico (not with her now) was taken in after being seized I think in customs (My father in law was a specialist exotica vet and worked closely with RSPCA etc at times) - that bird started out speaking portugese which tells you its origin. (I read a story about a parrot who was a witness in cartel trial once but thats another story !) So I like parrots in cages - they are funny. The whole thing though has a sinister start and some really sad stories attached.

If I am going to say something about the pet trade we could start with the story of the Spix's Maccaw. One of the rare blue parrots coming from South America. The collectors would pay huge sums to own a Spic's and kudos in the parrot world was gained by having a small collection of them. The difficulty was that these ignorant Sheikh's, businessman and "theme park" owners had no idea where Spix's came from or why they were so rare. By the time the sceintific world got a handle on it the truth was shocking. They depended on on type of fruiting palm that lived along dry creek edges in Brazil, a habitat under massive pressure from the development of ranching. They were probably rare in the first place and the rarer they became the higher the value placed on them by the collectors. The last couple of breeding pairs were located but it was too late and eventually after chicks and eggs were stolen one lone female was left in the wild in 2000 - mating with a different species of parrot. And then disapeared - extinct in the wild without a fanfare on the news. Of course there were collections in private , perhaps a hundred birds but then the stupid selfish collectors could not agree how and where a breeding programme should be set up and insisted that all of their birds were captive bred etc etc. and legal. The Brazilian government soldiered on with various interested conversation Groups. The last things I read about the saga weren't good but I understand there is a committee set up now to try and get a breeding programme going with reintroduction etc. The first stage though is to protect the habitat.

A book by Tony Juniper probably does as much as anything to highlight the plight of the Spix and to expose the morons who caused the tragedy in the first place and then spent a decade arguing about what they could do to help. Why are 60 or the 93 known birds that survive in the world in Qatar ?? Yes they have a breeding programme but how did the birds get there in the first place. Equally who is this idiot in Switzerland with a giant walled ranch with security cameras etc who won't disclose how many birds he has etc or lend them out the programme to keep the gene pool healthy. This is a book to make you weep. Literally burst into tears.

If you are flying this Xmas watch the Hunter - or it may now be out on DVD - William Dafoe as a hunter asked to  verify and "collect" a speciman (''shoot"), what might be the last surviving Tasmanian Tiger. A piece of wimsey but heartbreaking. I won't spoil it - just watch it.  

I was saying to Mrs C last night that when I am finished with desk jockeying and the boys have found their way into the world I'd like to get involved with a Spix or a frog or a Munia or anything and see if I could make a difference. We were watching stuff about Dianne Fossey last night - without her the highland Gorillas might not still be around. I am not saying I'd like to be Diane Fossey - I think I could write a book about some little animal and spend some time raising some money or whatever. Thats got to be a worthy thing to do.

Where was I ? Yes Lovebirds

Fischer's Lovebird, Agapornis fischeri
Tanzania, Bouganvillia Lodge, Near Ngorogoro Crater
July 2012

Wednesday, December 5, 2012

203 : Little Sparrowhawk


Little Sparrowhawk - Accipter Minullus

Frustrating that with such a beautiful little bird I couldn't get my act together with  the camera. I am c**p at taking pictures in low light conditions. I was trying to follow the "teachings of Dhillon" but on this occasion it was nothing doing.

These are basicially a miniature sparrowhawk whose main diet is insects, lizards and small bats ! They stand about 22cm from head to the tip of the tail so 2/3ds of so of a school ruler - dinky ! About the size of a medium build dove and smaller than a large pigeon.




On the subject of miniature birds of prey I saw a Merlin once on the Isle of Sheppey exploding into a flock of starlings each of which did not look much bigger than it. I think they come in at 16-18 cm or so. Small.

The award though has to go to a bird that can be found on the Malay peninsula - one of the those that you dream at night about in your "bower" with a birding fever (yes I dream birds - great anxious hunts through scattering flocks in treetops that never quite come into focus - chases through scrub following distant calls). I was reading a book called around the world in 4,000 birds t'other night. It reads too much like  a shopping list with a couple chasing around for a year to set a world record - no time for a camera - just a hectic dash with many irritable episdes along the way. I don't like the premise as this site is very slow cooking but I like some of the descriptions of places and the lists of birds you might see.

I have started collecting bird books that I will one day hopefully use. I look up birds I see listed in these "Tickathons" as I read as otherwise its a pointless exercise. They just read as shopping lists as I say  interspersed with "fantastic bird" and "wow what colours" and I doin;'t knwo what they look like. What's the point of describing a bird - at least on the radio you hear the calls.  I got to a description of a flock (flock !) of raptors called Falconettes "huddled on a wire". I turned to the colour plate in Birds of South East Asia by Holland. They sounded like a 50's close harmony ensemble. My God ! I never knew ! Get this - tiny little miniature falcons with little round bodies like robins, tiny hooked beaks, tiny little beedy eyes and small pointed wings no bigger than a sparrow - 12 cm from the tip of the tail to the head. Little dolls house birds. Tiny miniature falcons that could fit in a tea cup. They must hunt very small prey.

I showed Mrs C - "look at those" - immediately she said "bring me one" - "what a picture ? Can't wait" I said "No the actual bird - I want one" she replied - she looked serious. "Just get me one". This then is the depraved pillow talk in the Al Barsha Villa. Talk of smuggling missions to the far East for dinky Falcons that can be cosseted in private and oohed over. I have never wanted to own a bird - I can imagine though turning up at some high brow falconry event in the Middle East  with a tiny dinky little Falconette perfectly trained to fetch miniature lures tied on the end of cotton. Like some wierd circus event. So thats that then - I have to risk imprisonment to capture and smuggle a tiny weeny Falconette back to Dubai from Kuala Lumpa. I can imagine it getting free of my pocket on an Airbus 380 and getting stuck in someones hair like  a tiny bat or swooping up and down the cabin while I looked down at my table and hid my birdbooks. Would everyone  scream or go "Ah - a weeny Falcon". "Sooooo cute" or "Daddy I want one".

Anyway I won't be smuggling Falconettes before you report me to Interpol - but I gotta get me a picture of one - Several -  and there are several species. And I have got to make sure it isn't a blurred photo ++ I need a ruler alongside. All tricky.

So if you think these blurred miniature sparrowhawks are cute we can shrink down even further ! Falcons smaller than Shrikes ! I am loving this - I never knew there was such a thing until last night.

Little Sparrowhawk, Accipter Minullus
Tanzania, Northern Serengeti, Mara River, Olakira Camp
July 2012