Thursday, September 12, 2013

Israel: Day 4

A quieter day today, with 'just' 62 Honey Buzzards on the watch for me  (followed by a further 130 later in the day), along with a few Booted Eagles and Harriers. Still plenty of other birds to keep one occupied though:

Booted Eagle
A slight improvement on yesterdays photo


The first Pallid Harrier of the count

Masked Shrike

Syrian Woodpecker

Wednesday, September 11, 2013

ISRAEL!!

So, after a few months of relative normality in Somerset, i'm back 'on the road' again. On monday I arrived in Israel where i'll be spending 5 weeks working on the Northern Valleys Raptor Count. i get patchy wi-fi here on the Kibbutz where i'm staying, so will do my best to upload some photos and sightings on to here periodically.

The birding has been flippin amazing so far, there are birds literally everywhere here, fields buzzing with larks and wagtails, buntings and warblers flipping between bushes and a sky full of raptors. After I  arrived a t stupid o'clock at the airport, Yoav Perlman picked me up and we had a few hours birding in the Bet Shean Valley before I joined the count team. I had 12 lifers in those few hours, the best birding i've had in a long time!

The big passage of Honey Buzzards is over, but I saw 1000+ yesterday and 500+ today. Lesser Spotted Eagles and Levant Sparrowhawks are the main focus of the count, and they are starting to dribble through now, with the big counts due in a week or so for the LS and a few weeks for LSE.

Anyways, a picture is worth a thousand words as they say:

Most of the raptors are reeeaalllly high up, and too far for photos
This is a standard view of a small part of a Honey Buzzard thermal
Blue-cheeked Bee Eater on the Jordanian border fence

Bird of the trip so far: Cinereous Bunting that I found after 'work' today.
Quite a rarity around these parts i'm told!


Booted Eagle
Lesser Spotted Eagle

Some come a bit lower though, like this juvenile Montagu's Harrier

Red-backed Shrike

Wednesday, August 07, 2013

Skomer

So, after a long while of birding only on the Avalon Marshes, which can be read about here, and a short while not birding at all, which can't be read about anywhere, I ventured out of county for a week on the island of Skomer, or Ynys Sgomer as it is known in Welsh. I was there mainly for a bit of a holiday to catch up with some good friends, but unsurprisingly, I saw a few birds too. The island is a seabird paradise, with Puffins and Manx Shearwaters being the stars. I took rather a lot of photos, heres a small selection, that busyness pending, I may add to over time:

Dazed and confused: This manxie really shouldn't have been out on dry land in daylight

A much more typical view

Juvenile Peregrine, the first confirmed Skomer fledger of the year

Puffin

Puffins

Raven

Sunday, April 28, 2013

Why are you still here?

The Avalon Marshes are producing some fantastic birding at the moment. You shouldn't be reading about it on here though, you should be looking at my new website www.avalonwildlife.co.uk for all the latest.

Oh, and if you could add it as a link, that would be amaaaazing. cheers

I found two of these leggy beauts yesterday!!
Went looking for a Black Kite and bumped into this Osprey instead

Bitterns everywhere

Hobbies starting to arrive in numbers

Monday, April 15, 2013

Hoopoe

OK, I said I was going to post all Somerset stuff on the new website, but a couple of things......

First, I just had to show off this Hoopoe, found by my Dad just outside our village on some scrappy fields yesterday. I love how we're surrounded by top-class nature reserves and the birds just turn up on old farmland.

Secondly, I would really appreciate it if you could add the new website/blog www.avalonwildlife.co.uk to your links or blog lists. I'm trying to get the ball rolling so as much traffic as possible is really important right now. I'm currently trying to create a blog list like the one in the sidebar as a page for the new site but its a bit HTML-fiddly, so might be a while, but I will try and create reciprocals for any links.
Thanks a lot



Thursday, April 11, 2013

New Website, New Life!


So, this is what i've been quietly working away on for the last month or so, my new business Avalon Wildlife
Over the last few years I've come to realise what a truly awesome place for birds and wildlife the Somerset Levels are, thanks to a huge effort from various conservation bodies. The 'Avalon Marshes' in particular forming a huge area of co-joined nature reserves packed with cool stuff. As the area is pretty much the closest I can get to a 'home', I've decided to set up shop as a guide, to help people get the very best out of a visit to the region.

The project is still very much in a developmental stage at the moment, and I hope to be able to build up my services to a much broader operation than currently advertised, but hey, you gotta start somewhere.
The new website will also function as a day-to-day diary of what i'm seeing on the Avalon Marshes, so will take over from this blog. I hope to use this new website and blog to promote the area as a wildlife destination as well as promoting my own business, and plan to update it frequently, i'll also have a proper go at this Twitter thing soon, so please check back regularly, even if you're not interested in the guided tour side of things.

I will still leave this old blog running for any excursions outside of Somerset, and because I think it's quite a useful resource for my foreign trip ramblings.

If you could add this site to your links pages that would be very much appreciated, let me know and i'll happily add a reciprocal on here.

Any feedback on the services i'm offering, and the website itself would be very much appreciated, as i'm pretty new to this sort of thing. I'm best contacted these days at joe@avalonwildlife.co.uk

Cheers!

Tuesday, March 19, 2013

Somerset Birding

A week ago I moved back onto the Somerset Levels near Glastonbury, where it looks like i'm going to be based for foreseeable future. I've mostly been occupied working on a couple of rather interesting projects which I hope to share on here fairly soon. Of course, i've also spent plenty of time out birding in the fantastic area that is the Avalon Marshes. Here's a few highlights

The Pied-billed Grebe is still showing well at Ham Wall RSPB, a month after it was first discovered

Great White Egrets are all over the show, hopes are high for breeding again this year

Ducks everywhere!

The first migrants are starting to come through, with Chiffchaffs breaking into sporadic, and somewhat half-hearted song

With the Meare Heath lagoon being drained, we have a cracking bit of wader habitat which is already pulling stuff in. This Black-tailed Godwit was ringed in Iceland 2 years ago. 

Thursday, February 28, 2013

Snowdon

After a fortnight back in flat ol' Somerset, I was feeling the need to get mountains back in my life so headed up to Snowdonia for a long weekend. The weather was beautiful, and the mountains in great condition, enough snow and ice to make them look absolutely stunning and make the hiking a bit interesting, but not so bad as to make things dangerous.

The South-west ridge up to the summit, perfect!
 I wasn't birding, but couldn't help but notice a few top notch birds around. You know how it is!

Dipper, on the Aber Glaslyn


This Raven came in hoping for a share of our lunch on the way down from the Glyderau.  This was the closest I've ever seen Raven and for the first time really appreciated how great they are. An absolute Tank of a bird, and with beautiful glossy plumage when they catch the light right. It was duly rewarded for its magnificence and took its piece of ham sandwich off to feed another, presumable its youngster from last year.

Thursday, February 21, 2013

Nepal Photos

I've added a few new photos to the Langtang and Annapurna posts, and also uploaded a selection of Makalu and Everest photos, see below:

Trekking Part 1: Makalu Base Camp

Trekking Part 2: Everest

Trekking Part 3: Annapurna

Trekking Part 4: Langtang & Gosainkund


Saturday, February 16, 2013

Pied-billed Grebe

 As planned, we were down at Ham Wall nice and early, a little too early in fact, as thick fog was hampering the search for the Pied-billed Grebe. Could have stayed in bed another half hour!



I imagine the crowd got a little bigger than this later on

Not great viewing conditions

Eventually, as the fog started to burn off a little, the bird swum out from the reeds right in front of the viewing platform. It looked great through the scope, a really smart bird, the first i've seen in summer plumage. The visibility was still too poor for photos though, but hopefully you can just about make out what it is.

Podilymbus in the mist
17th February EDIT: the much nicer weather today allowed better views, but  it was still a little far for photies

Male Marsh Harrier at Ham Wall from a couple days ago



Friday, February 15, 2013

Trekking Part 4: Langtang

Well, against all odds, and despite the best efforts of the Himalayan winter, I've made it back from Nepal and home to Somerset in one piece.

Once JP arrived and we got permits sorted, we set off on the long bus journey up to Langtang National Park, up near the border with Tibet. The 8 hour ride was predictably hellish, and not helped by me throwing up so violently that I fainted, a slightly scary experience. Somewhat wobbly-leeged, we jumped ship at Dhunche, ready to start the trek in an alternative manner to the suggested route. First day was a big climb up to Sing Gompa, the highlight being a superb pair of Yellow-throated Martens that gave brilliant views near an army barracks at Dimphe. the forest below Sing Gompa was alive with birds, with Fire-tailed Sunbird, Himalayan Bluetail and Spot-winged Rosefinch being particularly nice. The hillside above SG was disappointingly empty on a quick 'warm-down' explore in the evening.
Yellow-throated Marten

Nutcracker

Spot-winged Rosefinch

To our great surprise, when we woke up the next morning, snow was falling heavily. Fortunately we were heading downhill that day so it wasn't too much of a worry as far as route finding was concerned. We hurried  on down to Thulo Syabru, and arrived just as the falling stuff turned into some really heavy rain. The bad weather seemed to have forced some things down the slopes and the fields around the village were alive with Green-backed Tit, OBP's, Plain-mountain Finch, and Plain-backed Thrush.
Plain-backed Thrush
Chesntut-tailed Minla

Long-tailed Shrike


The sky cleared the next day and we enjoyed beautiful sunshine over the next three days trekking up to Kyanjin Gompa at 3800m, with the avian highlights being a Maroon-backed Accentor in bamboo scrub just below Thulo Syabru, a flock of Grandala feeding in the snow above Ghora Tabela, and regular flybys from Lammergeiers.
Maroon-backed Accentor

Grandala

Lammergeier

 There was deep snow above Ghora Tabela, and Kyanjin Gompa was a totally different place to what it was 2 years before, it was absolutely stunning. An afternoon climb up to the 4600m Kyanjin Ri was well worth the effort (knee deep in snow with no trail to follow), rewarded by stunning views of the surrounding mountains and glaciers.



We trekked back down the valley, staying overnight at Renche, a much better stop than the favoured Lama Hotel, its position just up the slope giving it significantly more hours of sunshine. The next morning, we set off early and had been going less than 5 minutes when we rounded a corner in some bamboo scrub and BOOM, male SATYR TRAGOPAN, sat in the middle of the track. This stunning crimson, silver and blue pheasant locked eye contact for a few seconds, then head down, jumped off the path and down the steep slope. I dumped my rucksack and somewhat recklessly ploughed down the hill after it. Unsurprisingly, I didn't see the bird again, but that brief encounter was enough to make the whole trip worthwile. Satyr Tragopan has been the bird on top of my 'must see' list ever since I looked it up in the books after first hearing of it in Mark Cocker's 'Tales of a Tribe'. As an impressionable 16 year old whose most adventurous birding was probably the East Cliffs on Portland, reading the tragic tale of Alan Adams and his fatal quest for the Tragopan really opened my eyes to the lengths people went to in order to search out the best birds in the world, and inspired me to start planning for my first trip. Life has been rather interesting ever since.
Emotional as that brief moment was, the trek continued, and we we slogged back uphill to Sing Gompa. From there we were faced with the daunting prospect of crossing the Laurebina Pass, beyond the sacred lakes of Gosainkund. The Lonely Planet says something along these line about this leg of the trek 'the pass is dangerous after snow, and trekkers have perished here floundering in deep snow. If there has been heavy snowfall here recently, return to Dhunche'. Well, there had been heavy snow, but there was no way we were quitting now, mainly because we couldn't face the bus journey back to Kat, and we had met a couple of trekkers who had come over the pass in the opposite direction (though they told some pretty hair raising stories), so we decided to give it a crack.Starting early morning from the grim lodge at Laurebina, we trekked hard and fast up the hill, stopping only for a group of Snow Partridge, a quality lifer.
Hill Partridge

Snow Partridge

The lakes at Gosainkund were as spectacular as expected, and we were astonished to find a Sadhu living up there in the snow. I started thinking about how nuts religious folk can be for their beliefs, then realised that I was up there birding, not so different really. From Gosainkund up to the pass was tough, and I mean real tough. For the most of the time we were wading knee deep from snow, struggling to follow the tracks left by previous trekkers as they had been obliterated by wind, and climbing steeply all the time.
One of the easier sections of the pass traverse
It was a great relief to reach the pass, but the way down to Phedi was equally difficult going, and we were in quite the exhausted state when we finally rolled up late in the afternoon. From Phedi back to Kat was an absolute cake walk in comparison. And that was it, my winter in the himalays was over. After a couple of days kicking around Kathmandu and the near foothills, I returned back to rather soggy Somerset to try and work out what to do with my life. First priority is to be at Ham Wall early tomorrow for the reported Pied-billed Grebe, after that, who knows?