Showing posts with label Crested Lark. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Crested Lark. Show all posts

Thursday, 11 October 2018

Macedonia - Part II (September 30th - October 4th)

Sunday September 30th and we headed off to Skopje Airport to pick up our hire car. I always feel anxious with hire cars as David loves to floor the accelerator and my map reading skills are not great but it actually was ok with the roads generally pretty good and also pretty empty which David really enjoyed.

We headed off to Stobi winery first in sunny skies but by the time we arrived at the winery gates the clouds had rolled in and it was grey and cool with occasional spits of rain. The winery was closed for a private function which was a shame and so we headed onwards to Stobi ruins for a look around. The site was quite small but we eventually had the place all to ourselves and had an enjoyable wander around.

 Stobi Mosaic - Also on the Stobi Winery label and the 10 Denar Bank note

Stobi Theatre

The vegetation was very dry but there were little clumps of flowers dotted around which were magnets for good numbers of butterflies and despite the cloudy sky I managed to see a swallowtail along with clouded yellows, blues and whites.

 Swallowtail

Swallowtail close up

Birds were very obvious too and I had the best birdwatching of the trip here with tawny pipit, red throated pipit, swift, red rumped swallow, red backed shrike, chiffchaff, tree sparrow, white wagtail, house martin, swallow, wheatear, linnet, goldfinch, woodpigeon, starling, crested lark, spotted flycatcher, sparrowhawk and Syrian woodpecker all being seen.

 Tawny Pipit

 Crested Lark

Syrian Woodpecker

We carried on to Demir Kapija to look at the gorge but got a bit lost and ended up on a new motorway heading towards the Greek border! Eventually we managed to turn around and get back to the gorge before driving to Negotino for an overnight stay.

Monday 1st October and the sun had reappeared and after a quick visit to the nearby Bovin winery we drove over the mountains to the Roman ruins at Bargala, enjoying the amazing scenery along the way. The site was again small and again we eventually had it all to ourselves but the only birds I saw here were ravens, crested larks, tree sparrows and a juvenile red backed shrike. However with the sun shining it became very warm and there were butterflies everywhere - swallowtail, clouded yellow, whites including an Eastern bath white, small heath, blues, wall brown, small copper, grayling and Queen of Spain Fritillary. There were also hummingbird hawkmoths everywhere, I've never seen so many before.

Bargala

 Queen of Spain Fritillary

 Grayling Sp.

 Small Heath

 Eastern Bath White

 Eastern Bath White

Swallowtail

Puppy in the ruins

We drove on to Kratovo, a small town in the crater of an extinct volcano which was very quiet and laid back with old buildings and wonderful scenery. We stayed here for 2 nights and the next morning the day started well with the sun shining as we took a short drive to nearby Kuklica to view the stone dolls, weathered porous volcanic rocks that look like figures, and again we were the only ones there amongst the beautiful scenery.

Kuklica Stone Dolls

A Hermann's tortoise was a nice find wandering around the dusty and dry vegetation and there were plenty of jays around with a yaffling green woodpecker seen flying up into trees as we drove by. A skulking robin was a surprise plus all the usual butterflies were on view including what I think is a very worn male Adonis blue.

 Hermann's Tortoise

 Hermann's Tortoise 

 Grasshopper Sp. 

 Adonis Blue

Adonis Blue

We drove back to Kratovo and after a herbal tea in a cafe on the main square (no black tea on the menu) and a brief view of a flyover juvenile black stork we hiked up into the mountains to the small village of Gorni Kratovo, admiring the stunning scenery along the way. It was hot and sunny and I heard long tailed tits calling in the trees and saw at least 3 cirl buntings skulking in the bushes plus all the usual butterflies were on view including a large white and a female long tailed blue.

 Long Tailed Blue

Cricket Sp.

Things took a turn for the worse though when David, having decided to scramble up a rocky hillside, slipped on the way down and twisted his ankle. He luckily didn't break anything but was in a lot of pain as he hobbled slowly back to Kratovo and the next day had a very swollen foot developing some impressive bruising.

He was still able to drive and so we headed back to Skopje via Kokino, a megalithic observatory site referred to as the Stonehenge of Macedonia. David managed to slowly walk up to the rocky outcrop and around the rocky site where thrones have been hewn into rocks to observe the rising sun appearing between rock markers on certain days of the year. The scenery was stunning and we had the place to ourselves except for the ticket man and an English lady with 2 Macedonian friends who left not long after we arrived. A buzzard, a red throated pipit and a woodlark calling were the avian highlights and the usual butterflies were seen before we drove back to Skopje airport to drop the hire car off.

Kokino

We stayed the night at the Hotel Mirror near the airport and for the only time on the holiday we actually sat in the sun by the pool enjoying a beer while I watched a juvenile red backed shrike, collared doves, a chiffchaff, a hovering kestrel and starlings feeding in the fields nearby.

  Red-backed Shrike

Red-backed Shrike

October 4th and an early start saw us heading back to the airport for our return flight to Istanbul for the final part of our holiday but Macedonia had been a delight, very interesting and virtually devoid of tourists and despite David's accident we had had a really enjoyable time.

Thursday, 7 April 2016

Excellent Birding in Valencia, April 2nd to April 6th

Back in 2008 I was very fortunate to be chosen to attend the EBMT conference in Florence, Italy, and had a great time - the conference was very interesting and Florence was amazing. I didn't see much in the way of birds but the highlight was a male blue rock thrush which would sing every morning on the rooftops opposite my hotel bedroom.

Eight years later and I was again chosen to attend EBMT, this time in Valencia, Spain. The conference was again very interesting and Valencia was very nice too but this time I managed to get out on a birding trip and saw some excellent birds.

The train trip to Gatwick Airport on April 2nd went smoothly despite the early start (4.30 in the morning!) and I had some excellent views of 3 red kites flying low over Reading train station on a beautiful sunny morning. It was beautiful and sunny on arriving at Valencia airport too and it was lovely to see swallows and house martins flitting around the airport buildings as I got off the plane. Our hotel was in the centre of the old town of Valencia and while sitting on the rooftop terrace as the sun was setting I watched monk parakeets, yellow legged gulls and swifts flying over.

Yellow Legged Gulls from my hotel room, Valencia

April 3rd was warm and sunny but April 4th was cool and rainy (I thought the rain in Spain fell mainly on the plain) but we had 2 full on days at the conference anyway and I managed to add magpie, white wagtail, spotless starling, serin, grey wagtail, collared dove, feral pigeon, house sparrow, blackbird, woodpigeon and Sardinian warbler to my bird list on the journeys to and from the conference centre.

April 5th and after a morning at the conference my brain was starting to freeze up during the lectures and so despite the continuing rain I decided to break away and take a trip to the Albufera nature reserve, a large freshwater lake just outside Valencia and home to a good selection of birdlife.

I had purchased a 3 day travel pass costing 11.70 Euros for getting around Valencia and it included the bus journey to the lake, about 40 minutes away from the city centre, and despite my polite hints that I wanted to go alone my colleague Sue came along too despite having a very nasty chest infection with a noisy cough. Before getting the bus we visited a pharmacy where we were able to buy a course of antibiotics (amoxicillin) for 2.50 Euros despite having no prescription - so much for the worldwide concerns regarding antibiotic resistance!

The forecast was for the rain to stop during the afternoon but as we travelled on the bus to the lake it began to absolutely chuck it down and I missed our planned stop as the bus windows were all misted up and I wasn't exactly sure where we were meant to get off. We decided to carry on and get off at the end of the line with a plan to have a drink and something to eat before heading back towards Valencia and a stop at the lake, hoping that the rain might have stopped by then. We got off at what we thought was the end of the line but it was just a small village which fortunately had a small bar/restaurant that was open and where we had drinks and snacks. It was also fortunately by a large canal with lock gates linking the lake to the sea and a quick walk along the canal side in the pouring rain gave me some nice views of mallard, grey heron, little egret, swallow and a stunning summer plumaged whiskered tern that flew back and forth over the water dipping down to the surface - a lifer for me and well worth the soaking I got and the stress of the journey!

Grey Heron

The rain was beginning to ease as we headed back towards Valencia and this time we got off at the right stop at Playa de La Devesa, another large canal with lock gates linking the lake to the sea but with a great view over the large expanse of fresh water from the roadside. Scanning around the lake and I managed to add a distant marsh harrier over the reedbeds to my list along with Sandwich terns resting on wooden posts and cattle egrets flying over, while the roadside bushes held a few blackcaps.

We then headed off along a boardwalk by the canal side leading to the beach which luckily was mostly under pine trees and so a little drier but the rain was easing and eventually did stop. Sue was still coughing like a good'un and spotless starlings scattered as I tried to photograph them but never mind. Great tits were calling in the trees and I saw a few long tailed tits and a male whitethroat feeding in the undergrowth. A hoopoe was a nice surprise as it flew up from the ground and disappeared into the trees, an all too brief view, and also too brief were a group of 6 yellow wagtails flying over calling and looking very yellow on a very dull day but I am not sure what race of yellow wagtail they were.

Eventually the boardwalk arrived at the side of a lagoon and right in front of me was the bird I was really hoping to see - excellent views of 2 Audouins gulls, 1 preening on the lagoon side mud and 1 perched on a sign post. I have seen Audouins gull before in the harbour in Tripoli, Libya, but they were quite distant and I was really glad to get much better views of them this time. They eventually flew off but later 4 birds flew in to the lagoon side where they called and displayed to each other - I have to say I was quite smitten with them, they were larger than I had expected and very graceful looking with a lovely courtship call and have become my equal first favourite gull, tied with little gull.

 Audouin's Gull

Audouin's Gull

 Audouin's Gulls

 Audouin's Gulls

Audouin's Gull

Around the lagoon were calling crested larks, a pair of black winged stilts, 2 greenshank, a summer plumaged dunlin, Kentish plovers, a common sandpiper, 2 shelduck, a night heron and a rather poorly looking winter plumaged sanderling with a limp which was trying to feed on the muddy shore.

 Kentish Plovers

 Kentish Plover

 Kentish Plover

 Black Winged Stilts

 Crested Lark

 Night Heron

A small duck caught my eye and I was very pleased to see it was a female white headed duck, another lifer for me and a bird I hadn't really expected to see. Unfortunately it remained a little distant and regularly dived underwater but I managed a few ropey record shots of it.

 White Headed Duck

White Headed Duck

It was time to head back to the city centre all too soon but despite getting soaked and having very little time I had had a great birding experience with 2 lifers in the bag.

The following day and the weather was rapidly improving but it was time to head back to the UK and as we waited on the tarmac to get onto the plane at Valencia airport the sun was shining and it was surprisingly hot. The train ride back to Plymouth was fraught at times due to delays and transfers but eventually we were back in Plymouth and I was pleased to have seen more red kites near Reading, a swallow over Exminster Marsh and 6 Sandwich terns diving for fish on the River Exe from the train on the journey.

Valencia Oranges

The Snow-capped Pyrenees

All in all not a bad few days away!