Showing posts with label Whooper Swan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Whooper Swan. Show all posts

Wednesday, 12 October 2022

Shetland - 5th October

Due to the wet start to the day I decided to head to Loch Spiggie RSPB to add a few waterbirds to my trip list. Starting at the southern end a scan from the roadside layby produced a Short-eared Owl and some common waterbirds. I then headed to the north end of the Loch and spent a little while in the hide here. 

Whooper Swan - Loch Spiggie RSPB

Twite - Loch Spiggie RSPB

It had started to brighten a little and so I headed to Sumburgh, a walk to the quarries and the garden at the start of the entrance road produced little and so I decided to head to Toab for an Arctic Redpoll but soon after my arrival news broke of a Yellow-rumped Warbler at Ellister near to Maywick and so I jumped in the car and sped the 15 minutes or so northwards. I ditched the car on a rather soft verge and headed to the small Sycamore stand in which the bird had been found. There were only around 20 birders present and it was not long before I had reasonable views of the bird as it fed in the Sycamores. Numbers of birders began to build and the farmer from the farmyard opposite became increasingly irate, the road was blocked by a crowd of birders meaning drivers could not pass and the situation was becoming ugly and so I decided I would leave the scene. 

Yellow-rumped Warbler - Ellister, Maywick

I headed north to Scalloway where the eclipse drake King Eider, which I had previously tried for at Wester Quarff, was now in the harbour here and I soon found the bird with a small flock of Common Eider. I birded a few areas around Scalloway before heading to Asta to the north where at last I found a Yellow-browed Warbler, a species thin on the ground this year. I then headed back south and birded the Leebitten and Sandwick areas until the light began to fade but saw little. I then headed back to Lerwick and was back to the hotel for around 18:00.

Eclipse drake King Eider (left bird) with Common Eider - Scalloway harbour

Oystercatcher with Limpet - Leebitten

Links to the days eBird Checklists

Sunday, 4 October 2020

Shetland - 3rd October

In a stiff south-east wind with occasional showers, some heavy, I began the day birding the Sumburgh Head and Grutness area. There were good numbers of migrants with Goldcrest, Blackcap and Robin seemingly in every patch of cover. At Sumburgh Farm a superb, self found, Little Bunting got the pulse racing and raised the expectations. A Lesser Whitethroat was flushed from a weedy field where there was also a small flock of Brambling. At Grutness a brief flight view of yesterday's Great Grey Shrike was a Shetland tick.

Little Bunting - Sumburgh Farm, Shetland

Brambling - Sumburgh Farm, Shetland

Goldcrest - Sumburgh Farm, Shetland

I then headed up to the headland where the Lanceolated Warbler from yesterday was still showing superbly as it fed along the wall and Goldcrest flitted in the tussocks of Red Fescue. Checking my phone there was no news of anything of great significance which was somewhat surprising given the weather conditions and so I decided to head to Rerwick near to Bigton where a Radde's Warbler was found yesterday. I gave the bird around an hour to show in its chosen tiny clump of Willow and Sycamore but there was no sign - the bird has generally been very elusive.

Goldcrest - Sumburgh Head, Shetland

Lanceolated Warbler - Sumburgh Head, Shetland

Lanceolated Warbler - Sumburgh Head, Shetland

Lanceolated Warbler - Sumburgh Head, Shetland

Lanceolated Warbler - Sumburgh Head, Shetland

Lanceolated Warbler - Sumburgh Head, Shetland

I then found myself at a bit of a loose end, my camera's electronics seemed to have completely failed and so I fiddled with this a while scanning Loch of Spiggie to add a few water birds to my trip list. There were 38 Whooper Swan present and a passage of 246 Barnacle Goose moving south overhead.

Whooper Swan - Loch of Spiggie, Shetland

I then headed to Levenwick where I birded the area around the stores, the highlight here was a Jack Snipe at the mouth of the quarry. I then headed to Hoswick Burn and worked the bushes lining the burn, here the highlight was three Yellow-browed Warbler and a female (type) Redstart. News then broke of a Siberian Stonechat on the road between Cunningsburgh and Blett and so I headed here and got rather brief and distant views. The light was now closing in and I decided to head back to Lerwick to try and sort my camera out. The day had offered so much by, generally, had failed to deliver on a significant rariety. Maybe tomorrow.

Monday, 27 January 2020

South Korea and Taiwan - Background and 26-27th January (Day 1 and Day 2)

Background
I had long wanted to visit Taiwan for its range of fantastic endemic species and so when Ian Merrill offered me a place on a trip in early 2019 I jumped at the chance. The itinerary also included South Korea which I had not really considered previously and there were few ticks here but the birding here proved fantastic and I thoroughly enjoyed my time. Our team consisted of Ian, Andy Deighton and Trevor Codlin.

Logistics
For the South Korea part of the trip we used Niall Moores of Birds Korea , Niall is the main birding guide for the country. Niall is British and has spent many years living and working in South Korea. He can be contacted at nial.moores@birdskorea.org. We had booked Niall early in 2019 to secure his time as he also leads for a number of tour companies. Niall arranged all the hotels and car hire and dealt with all the logistics, I did much of the driving which was pretty straightforward. Personally, I wouldn't want to tackle South Korea without a guide although I am sure it is possible, the road networks are complex and constantly changing, English is not widely spoken and many of the birding sites require fairly specialist local knowledge to access. Niall's account of our trip can be viewed here.

For Taiwan we had sought a guide for the duration but the main guide we wanted to use, Richard Foster of Taiwan Birding, was out of the country guiding in Sri Lanka. However, we did contact Richard during our trip for some advice on finding specific key birds and he was very helpful. Richards email is info@birdingattaiwan.com and I would suggest that if you are arranging a trip and require a guide that you contact him well in advance. We explored a number of other guides, some helpful some not so and one in particular was extortionately expensive. Ultimately we opted to arrange the trip ourselves, like many others do, and we had no major problems doing so. Ian prepared the itinerary, booked most of the hotels and arranged the car hire while I did all of the driving and Google (assisted by Andy) did the navigating. While, at times, there was a language barrier this was an easy country to self-guide in.

Weather
The weather in South Korea was largely cold and overcast with some brighter spells. The 30th and 31st were largely sunny and cold. Temperatures were in the region of 6c during the day and in the low minus figures at night.

In Taiwan we largely birded at mid to high altitudes and so the temperatures were naturally lower. At the higher elevations at Wushe the temperature was around 2c with a strong wind blowing, while at Kenting National Park and Pungtung in the south the temperature was around 26c. There was no significant daytime rain but on the night of 4th there was heavy overnight rain that had cleared by dawn.

Annoyances
There were very few annoyances apart from the outbreak of the novel coronavirus (COVID-19), a new strain of coronavirus which was first identified in Wuhan City, China. But despite South Korea and Taiwan being identified by the UK Government as high risk areas we were largely in relatively remote areas away from populated areas and so had little impact on our behaviour although we did notice an increase in surgical masks being worn.

Equipment
I took with me my Olympus kit with the OMD EM1X and EM1 Mark II camera, 300 F4 lens, 40-150mm F2.8 lens and 1.4 converter. I mainly used the 300mm as birds were generally mid-distance. The 40-150mm was used on a couple of occasions but I could have made do without it. Scopes were essential in South Korea but of relatively limited use in Taiwan.

Itinerary

South Korea
  • 26th January (Day 1) – Flight LHR (09:00) arrive Charles de Gaul 11:25, depart 13:10.
  • 27th January (Day 2) – Arrive Seoul 08:10 then drive to Han River, Paldang and then on to Songdo Park, Incheon. Night in Incheon.
  • 28th January (Day 3) – Songdo Tidal Flats, Incheon AM then on to Korea National Arboretum and Forest Museum, Pocheon City then drive to Seosan. Night in Seosan.
  • 29th January (Day 4) – All day Seosan Reclamation covering Areas A and B. Night Seosan.
  • 30th January (Day 5) – Seosan Reclamation Area A in the morning then Geum River, Seocheon PM. Night Gunsan.
  • 31st January (Day 6) – Yubu Island, Geum Estuary. Gunsan AM then drive north to Han River, Chungju. Drive to Seoul and overnight.
Taiwan
  • 1st February (Day 7) – Fly Seoul to Taipei then drive to Dasyueshan Forest Reserve, Taichung City. Night Dasyueshan Visitors' Centre.
  • 2nd February (Day 8) – Dasyueshan Forest Reserve all day. Night Dasyueshan Visitors' Centre.
  • 3rd February (Day 9) – Dasyueshan Forest Reserve all day. Night Dasyueshan Visitors' Centre.
  • 4th February (Day 10) – Dasyueshan Forest Reserve all day. Night Dasyueshan Visitors' Centre.
  • 5th February (Day11) – Dasyueshan Forest Reserve AM then drive to Huisin Forest Reserve. Night Huisin Forest Station.
  • 6th February (Day 12) – Huisin Forest Reserve early Am then drive to Dizang Budhist Temple, Puli. PM drive to Ren'ai and bird Blue Gates Trail. Night Chingjing Maple Hill Hotel.
  • 7th February (Day 13) – NTU Experimental Farm, Chung-yan AM then Song Shue Lodge, Hehuanshan National Forest Recreation Area and Blue Gates Trail PM. Night Chingjing Maple Hill Hotel.
  • 8th February (Day 14) – Song Shue Lodge, Hehuanshan National Forest Recreation Area AM then drive to Firefly Lodge, Dingben PM. Night Firefly Lodge.
  • 9th February (Day 15) – Alishan all day. Night in tourist village at Alishan National Forest Recreation Area.
  • 10th February (Day 16) – Alishan AM then drive south to Kenting National Park PM and then onto Pintung University. Night Hakka Eco-farm.
  • 11th February (Day 17) – Pingtung University AM then drive to Qingkunshen IBA, Jiangjun for late AM. PM drive to Taipei and international flight 00:20 on 12th via Amsterdam arriving London at 09:00 on 12th.
Map showing the key sites visited and species recorded during our trip. Zoom into map and click on pins for more details.


26th and 27th January
The alarm went off at 03:15 on 26th and after some last minute faffing I left home and met Trev at the Winchester Park and ride at 04:45. The drive to Heathrow Terminal 4 was very quick and by 6:05 we had parked, checked into our flight and met up with Andy and Ian. After passing through security we had breakfast and made our way to our departure gates. Our flight for Paris left on time at 09:00, once in Paris we passed through security and boarded our 13:10 flight to Seoul. We flew east over the Baltic and Estonia passing north of Moscow and then over the Ural Mountains, then to the north of Omsk before passing over northern Mongolia and Ulaanbaatar flew to the north of Beijing before crossing the sea to the Korean Peninsula and dropping into Seoul landing at 08:10 on 27th.

After collecting our Hyundai Starex mini-van we were on our way and straight onto the unnecessarily wide highways flanked by housing blocks that seem to typify this area of South Korea. The landscape was very parched and the country is experiencing an exceptionally mild and dry winter and where temperatures would normally be sub-zero, the landscape snow covered and the waterways frozen instead it is relatively mild and snow and ice free. We travelled east and headed to the east side of Seoul and to the town of Padang through which flows the Han River. After negotiating the tangle of backstreets which are intertwined with express ways we found the cycleway that we followed westwards along the river for a kilometre or so. The wide Han River was chock-a-block with birds with hundreds of Whooper Swan, Taiga Bean Goose, Goldeneye and Mallard with smaller numbers of Pochard, Eastern Spot-billed Duck, Little Grebe and Great Crested Grebe. The highlights on the river were two White-tailed Eagle and two male and a female Scaly-sided Merganser which were hunting using their distinctive snorkelling technique amongst the rocky areas of the river. On the rocks in the river was my first tick of the trip, Japanese Pied Wagtail, some of which were in song. While in the scrub flanking the cycleway we recorded Vinous-throated Parrotbill, Daurian Redstart, Meadow Bunting, Yellow-throated Bunting, Long-tailed Rosefinch, Brown-eared Bulbul and Naumann’s Thrush. My eBird checklist for the area can be viewed here.

Meadow Bunting - Han River, Paldang, South Korea

Meadow Bunting - Han River, Paldang, South Korea

Meadow Bunting - Han River, Paldang, South Korea

Taiga Bean Goose - Han River, Paldang, South Korea

Taiga Bean Goose and Whooper Swan - Han River, Paldang, South Korea

Whooper Swan - Han River, Paldang, South Korea

Naumann's Thrush - Han River, Paldang, South Korea

Marsh Tit- Han River, Paldang, South Korea

Oriental Greenfinch - Han River, Paldang, South Korea

Long-tailed Rosefinch - Han River, Paldang, South Korea

Scaly-sided Merganser - Han River, Paldang, South Korea

Daurian Redstart - Han River, Paldang, South Korea

Daurian Redstart - Han River, Paldang, South Korea

Vineous-throated Parrotbill - Han River, Paldang, South Korea

After little sleep on the flight and no food since landing, come 13:30 we were all flagging and so we retired to a nearby restaurant for lunch. The restaurant had a superb view over the Han River and from here we saw Smew and Goosander. The highlight came though just as Trev was talking about how we needed a Steller’s Sea-eagle to swoop down to the river and at that very moment a superb adult eagle dropped from the sky to collect a morsel from the surface of the river – it was remarkable the coincidence between the two events. We all tucked into a hearty burger before heading a short way east along the river as far as the dam primarily with the aim of getting further views of the eagle. On the river were further large numbers of Whooper Swan, Great Cormorant, Goosander and Eastern Spot-billed Duck while the Steller’s Sea-eagle showed, albeit rather distantly as it flew along the forest slopes flanking the river. My eBird checklist for the area can be viewed here.



At around 14:45 we headed back west and into the sprawl of Seoul to Songdo Park in the District of Incheon. This peaceful park surrounded by residential tower blocks was currently supporting a Fieldfare, only the second record for South Korea and we soon saw this bird. However, for us the real highlight was a flock of around 150 Bohemian Waxwing with, mixed amongst their ranks, up to 18 Japanese Waxwing. This was one of the main species I wanted to see while in the country and they didn’t disappoint. Slightly smaller than the Bohemian Waxwing with an obvious yellow wash on the belly, red tail tip and the black eyestripe extending all the way along the rear edge of the crest to meet its tip – these were stunning little birds. Also in the park we enjoyed good views of BramblingNaumann’s Thrush, Dusky Thrush, Brown-eared Bulbul and Japanese Tit. My eBird checklist for the area can be viewed here.

Bohemian and Japanese Waxwing - Songdo Park, Incheon

Bohemian Waxwing - Songdo Park, Incheon

Bohemian and Japanese Waxwing - Songdo Park, Incheon

Bohemian and Japanese Waxwing - Songdo Park, Incheon

Bohemian and Japanese Waxwing - Songdo Park, Incheon

Japanese Waxwing - Songdo Park, Incheon

Japanese Waxwing - Songdo Park, Incheon

Bohemian Waxwing - Songdo Park, Incheon

Japanese Tit - Songdo Park, Incheon

Brown-eared Bulbul - Songdo Park, Incheon

Naumann's Thrush - Songdo Park, Incheon

We stayed in the park until dusk before travelling a short distance to our hotel, the hotel ‘Me To’ in Songdo.

Links to Other Days of the Trip (Click to View)

South Korea

Taiwan

Friday, 5 October 2018

Shetland Mainland - 5th October

The weather forecast was for a windy day with a damp start to the morning and so I decided to have a lay-in and set the alarm for 06:45, I eventually got out of bed at 07:15 and out in the field (well into the car anyway) by 08:00. A Pied-billed Grebe was present at Loch of Spiggie and while I decided to go birding before twitching the grebe the weather was pretty nasty and news came through that the grebe was present and so I decided to head for it first off. I arrived at the road on the west side of the Loch and soon got onto the Pied-billed Grebe, there were around 30 birders present. It was distant and I was somewhat disapointed by the views and had to scrounge some scope views to even be confident that it was at least a grebe. I spent around an hour here and the grebe would frequently disapear into the marginal vegetation for periods of time. Also here were two Swallow, a Slavonian Grebe and several Tufted Duck but it was cold and very windy and so I didn't spend much time looking at anything but the grebe. The Pied-billed Grebe had first been found here on 4th November 2017 remaining until 18th April 2018 and so it looks like it may spend another winter at Loch Spiggie.

Loch of Spiggie perhaps gives an impression of how cold and windy it was

Pied-billed Grebe - Loch of Spiggie, Mainland Shetland

Slavonian Grebe and Tufted Duck - Loch of Spiggie, Mainland Shetland

I then headed north along the west shore of the Loch of Spiggie stopping occasionally but there was little to be seen but for 22 Whooper Swan at the northern end of the loch.

Whooper Swan - Loch of Spiggie, Mainland Shetland

Whooper Swan - Loch of Spiggie, Mainland Shetland

The Cooss - Loch of Spiggie, Mainland Shetland

I continued north through Scousburugh and to Geosetter and spent an hour or so birding here. It was very slow and the only birds I recorded of note were a single Goldcrest, a male Reed Bunting and an Icelandic Redwing.

View over Bay of Scousburgh to Northern Ness and Colsay

The rariety hotspot of Geosetter

Top end of Geosetter, its quite tough work getting up this far as one has to scramble 
along near verticle grassy slopes

Icelandic Redwing - Geosetter, Mainland Shetland

Icelandic Redwing - Geosetter, Mainland Shetland

I then headed to the east coast of the island and birded Levenwick, Upperton and Southpunds and then north to Northwick and Northwick Burn but saw very little. There was a rostrata type Common Redpoll and Icelandic Redwing at Upperton, two Swallow at Levenwick and two Swallow and another Icelandic Redwing at Hoswick but in the strong winds it was very slow going. I spent more time enjoying the landscape than expecting to find a rare, stiil, forecast is for a better day tomorrow so its all to play for......

Leven Wick Bay - Mainland Shetland