Wednesday, 30 October 2013

Mandarin duck at Wembury and Wryneck at Ford Park Cemetery

Since returning from the trip to Ethiopia I haven't been out and about much, instead I have been catching up with chores (and sleep!) and being busy at work.

With the mild weather I had the moth trap out in the back yard on October 23rd/24th and for my troubles I had 3 moths - a light brown apple moth, a plume moth and a common marbled carpet. I guess it is now time to put the moth box away until the spring.

A trip to the caravan at Bude to put it to bed for the winter on October 15th was pleasantly sunny with a few butterflys flitting about and feeding on ivy flowers including a very smart comma. Nearby Maer Lake had wigeon, teal and shoveler amongst the mallards and a very frustrating view of a distant small wader feeding on its own at the back of the Lake and mostly hidden by grass - it had the jizz of a little stint with one having been reported a few days previously but without my telescope I couldn't be sure.

Comma and Red Admiral, Bude
 

Unfortunately the Out-laws had forgotten to bring the caravan cover with them so we headed down to the caravan again on October 24th to finish the job. A painted lady was trying to warm itself up in the brief spells of sunshine and a plume moth was found in the waste disposal block. The caravan park has been taken over recently and bizarrely the security light on top of the waste disposal block was on in the middle of the day - maybe next year the light will be back on overnight and I will get some decent moth sightings after a poor showing this year.

Bird wise a flock of around 40 golden plover were flying around over Maer Lake where around 300 Canada geese were noisily roosting and bathing and a sparrowhawk was being buzzed by a small flock of starlings. Best birds were 2 adult winter plumaged Mediterranean gulls which flew over the caravan heading inland, looking beautifully ghostly white in the sunshine.

October 30th and I headed off to Wembury for a muddy and blustery walk along the coast path. It was quiet bird wise with 2 cirl buntings, 2 buzzards, 2 little egrets, stonechats and a grey wagtail being the highlights. However the best bird was a totally unexpected male mandarin duck feeding with mallards amongst the rocks by the sewage pipe, a first for Wembury for me and looking quite out of place on the sea.

 Male Stonechat, Wembury
 
 Male Mandarin Duck, Wembury
 
Male Mandarin Duck
 

 Rusty Dot Pearl, Wembury
 
 Caterpillar at Wembury, ? a ruby tiger
 
Red Admiral, Wembury
 

Arriving home and on checking the sightings page I read about a wryneck being seen at Ford Park Cemetery so I headed off to have a look for it. On arriving at the Cemetery 2 birders were staking out a patch of gravestones and as I watched the area a small group of meadow pipits noisily flew up and away from the grass along with a slightly larger bird which flew in to the nearby hedge. I was reliably informed the bird that flew in to the hedge was the wryneck which they had been watching but I didn't actually get the chance to ID it for myself so I guess it would have to be a half year tick, if a year tick at all. I spent some time wandering around trying to find it again but with no luck and after 45 minutes it began to rain so I headed off home, seeing a noisy flyover raven and around 12 flyover redwing, my first of the Autumn, before leaving.

Thursday, 17 October 2013

Ethiopia, 28th September to 12th October 2013

Having achieved second place in the bid for hosting Davids Sumptuous 50th Birthday Holiday Extravaganza last year, Ethiopia came first this year in the bid for hosting his Sumptuous 51st Birthday Holiday Extravaganza. And so off to Heathrow we headed by train on the 27th September for our night flight to Addis Ababa, seeing just 3 red kites near Reading and the resident Slavonian Grebe on the River Exe from the train on the journey.

On arriving at the Hotel Ghion in Addis Ababa the following morning a quick walk around the wonderful hotel gardens provided plenty of sightings of various exotic birds and 5 bird species endemic to The Horn of Africa but I was too tired to appreciate them fully so headed off to bed for a few hours sleep. And so the tour of the historical circuit of Northern Ethiopia began and it was a whistle stop tour to say the least, purely cultural with wildlife watching snatched in breaks here and there.

Ethiopia is an amazing place - stunning scenery, very green and teeming with birdlife, with lots of interesting ruins and churches along the way. The Blue Nile Falls and the Awash Falls were brilliant after what has been a very wet rainy season in Ethiopia, and the castles at Gondar, stellae at Axum and the rock carved churches of Lalibela were pretty fantastic too.

The Blue Nile Falls

Wildlife highlights were feeding wild hyenas with strips of meat in Harar, hippopotamus in Lake Tana, Beisa oryx and Salt's dik-dik in Awash National Park, Gelada baboons in the Simien Mountains and 2 species of hawk-moths attracted to the hotel restaurant lights at night.

Feeding Wild Hyenas at Harar

Sleeping Hippopotamus in Lake Tana

Beisa Oryx, Awash National Park

Salt's Dik-dik, Awash National Park

Male Gelada Baboon, Simien Mountains

Privet Hawk-moth?, Gondar

Verdant Hawk-moth?, Lalibela

Vestal Moth, Bahir Dar

Drinker Moth type species?, Harar

Birds were everywhere and I managed to see around 180 species, including 11 endemic species to The Horn of Africa, but including birds that I didn't ID as they flew off or showed briefly amongst vegetation or were glimpsed as we whizzed past in the mini-bus or that I could only assign to a family and not to a species. Highlights were thick billed ravens, one of my favourite birds of the trip, endemic and with the most amazing thick bill; lammergeiers flying past at eye level along a mountain ridge and almost close enough to touch; a stop at a rubbish dump near Bahir Dar where griffon, hooded and Egyptian vultures scavenged with marabou storks while various races of yellow wagtails fed between their feet; and an amazing early morning boat trip on Lake Tana where the birds were overwhelming in quantity and variety and included little bee-eater, great white pelican, African darter, hammerkop, black headed coucal and silvery cheeked hornbill.

 Thick Billed Raven, Simien Mountains (Endemic)
 African Paradise Flycatcher, Addis Ababa
 Blue-breasted Bee-eater, Harar
 White-winged Cliff Chat, Harar (Endemic)
Male Little Rock Thrush, Harar
 Greater Blue-eared Starling, Harar
 Feeding Yellow Billed Kites in Harar
 Augur Buzzard, Lake Bishoftu
 Hemprich's Hornbill, Lake Bishoftu
 Ruppell's Weaver, Lake Bishoftu
 Abyssinian Slaty Flycatcher, Addis Ababa (Endemic)
 Silvery Cheeked Hornbill, Lake Tana
 Black Crowned Crane, Lake Tana
 Griffon Vultures, Bahir Dar Rubbish Dump
 Male Village Weaver, Lake Tana

 Yellow Billed Stork, Lake Tana
 Giant Kingfisher, Lake Tana
 Male Scarlet-chested Sunbird, Bahir Dar
 African Harrier-hawk, Gondar

 Immature Tawny Eagle, Gondar
 Pied Crow, Debark
 Ruppell's Robin Chat, Debark
 Groundscraper Thrush, Debark
 Bruce's Green Pigeon, Axum
 Abyssinian Wheatear, Axum (Endemic)
 Speckled Pigeon, Axum
 White-billed Starling, Axum (Endemic)
 Male Red-cheeked Cordon-bleu, Axum
 Hemprich's Hornbill, Axum
 Black-winged Lovebird, Axum (Endemic)
 Juvenile White-winged Cliff Chat, Lalibela (Endemic)
White-collared Pigeon, Lalibela (Endemic)

And so it was a fantastic holiday - with an amazing tour guide called Sue who really helped to make the country come alive.It was exhausting, frustrating, uplifting, fun, humbling, upsetting, thought provoking and breath taking - I need a holiday to get over it all especially as I returned with a stinking cold and having experienced a 7 hour flight delay on the way home with a very chilly night trying to sleep in Addis Ababa airport!