Saturday 30 January 2010

Commoners

I took a spin up to Huai Mai Teng reservoir this morning as I did not have to teach. In my heart I was hoping to see rain quail. Alas no! But there were a couple of very dainty little ringed plovers which obliged in front of the lens.
Little ringed plover, charadrius dubius, Huay Mai Teng Reservoir, Ratchaburi Province, 30.01.10

The scope gave me a delightful view of seven lesser whistling ducks taking their Saturday morning constitutional on the reservoir, a very lively common kingfisher and this paddyfield pipit. There was a distant black kite hanging out on a branch and many regulars: little cormorants, little egrets, black winged stilts, barn swallows, black drongos and one solitary grey heron.  All common birds, but I like them!

Paddyfield pipit, anthus rufulus, Huay Mai Teng Reservoir, Ratchaburi Province, 30.01.10

In the afternoon we headed down to Petchaburi Province in search of raptors. There was an abundance of black kites and smaller numbers of harriers but alas the sought after eagles were high in the sky. I feel comfortable saying we saw one steppe eagle but thereafter the handful of eagles we saw will have to be recorded as unidentified. Here are some of the common birds we saw:

Oriental magpie robin, copsychus saularis, Wat Norng Blah Lai, Petchaburi Province, 30.01.10
Green bee-eater, merops orientalis, Wat Norng Blah Lai, Petchaburi Province, 30.01.10



asian openbill, anastomus oscitans, Wat Norng Blah Lai, Petchaburi Province, 30.01.10

From what  I understand the openbill is a major success story in terms of numbers. According to those in the know this bird was few and far between as recently as ten years ago. However numbers have soared in recent years and in and around the central plain it can be seen everywhere. We have a major roost nearby and there can be 5,000 birds in it at times.

Finally a silhouette of a black kite.
black kite, mulvus migrans Wat Norng Blah Lai, Petchaburi Province, 30.01.10

One of the things I  started to do with the camera today is to set the autofocus to the centre focus point only. I think this is helping me get more of my shots in focus. Now I need to master the art of taking shots of moving birds. The fun factor is high and the learning curve is relentlessly upward!

Commoners! Indeed! Nothing common about any of these birds!

Monday 25 January 2010

Raptorous

What a day! Wat Norng Bla Lai, my transliteration of the Thai name, is next to Khao Yoi in Phetchaburi province and I reckon I am going to spend a fair amount of time there over the next few weeks. I saw more eagles and other raptors today than I have ever seen with the exception of the Raptor Watch. Today's eagle count: greater spotted, steppe, imperial and a possible booted eagle; other raptors: common kestrel, male & female, pied harrier, black kite, brahminy kite, black shouldered kite. All this about 40 minute's drive from home.


There were a fair number of photographers out with long lenses as the location provides excellent opportunities for photographing these spectacular birds. I have to say the bird that impressed me most was the common kestrel. It really is a work of art. I managed to get a reasonable shot of the female which is below. But as this is the avian world, it is the male who is the work of art, but my pics of the male are just not good enough! They are too indistinct. The real point is that as that I am getting to see these types of birds a wee voice is continually saying: "You need a 400 mm lens to do justice to these birds!"

Common Kestrel, female, falco tinnunculus, Wat Norng Bla Lai, 24.01.10

Ok,then, here is the male. Unfortunately he wouldn't look at the camera and his face is really well worth seeing!



Common Kestrel, male, falco tinnunculus, Wat Norng Bla Lai, 24.01.10

The eagles......what can I say? Well first of all a big thanks to Mr Parn, the local raptorologist, who drove me into the fields and acted as a guide. He's also armed with a 500 mm lens and you can check out his work on his web site Discovery Thai. Even though it is in Thai language, click on some of the links, you will see some great photos.



greater spotted eagle, aquila clanga,Wat Norng Bla Lai, 24.01.10


I believe the diagnostics are shortish wings and slight neck. You can also see the "landing lights" particularily on the higher wing, the visible white spot.I don't know how many different greater spotted eagles we saw but of all the eagles throughout the day this was by far the most common species.  I wish I could show you more detail but alas my photographic equipment limits me. I have done a little research as I have been writing this blog and I rather fancy it might be the Canon 300 mm f/4L IS USM. 


Next up is the impressive sounding steppe eagle, all the way from the Russian steppes, showing astonishing good judgement in a winter destination far away from the inhospitable cold of Siberia. 


steppe eagle, aquila nipalensisWat Norng Bla Lai, 24.01.10

The "nipalensis" in the taxanomic name must mean "Nepalese". Mmmmmmm. 

Finally the imperial eagle, the biggest eagle in Thailand. I have been looking at pics from other photographers. Mmmmm I am sorely tempted to go out and buy that lens. The diagnostic here is the size of the wing span. This becomes rather more obvious when you see it with a large-billed crow. Parn reckons he saw a booted eagle but I really wouldn't know and I have nothing to offer up to support the claim. From what Parn said it would be only the third sighting of the bird this year so I shall no make any outlandish claims! 


imperial eagle, aquila heliaca,Wat Norng Bla Lai, 24.01.10

Here are some random shots of other birds seen today. There were a few pied harriers in attendance but no males. I am particularily pleased with this one as it has cropped reasonably well. I reckon this is a female due to the  visible white uppertail covert band. But, hey, I get them wrong so please feel free to correct me!

pied harrier, circus melanoleucosWat Norng Bla Lai, 24.01.10
pied harrier, circus melanoleucosWat Norng Bla Lai, 24.01.10

This is the same bird before I opened the car door and it flew off to give the above picture! Finally a black kite.

black kite, mulvus lineatusWat Norng Bla Lai, 24.01.10

We also saw a lesser coucal, alas no photograph, but for me this is another new species to add to the list. Earlier in the day I had a good view of a brahminy kite and a juvenile of the same species. Too far away to photograph but I had them in the scope and good to see them side by side.

Not a bad day's work!


Saturday 23 January 2010

Phetchaburi Province: A Few Birds

By sheer coincidence I live close to serious bird action and today's photos indicate what is on offer less than hour from my home. Today once more to Khao Yoi, a 30 minute drive from home, just down the Petchkasem highway. Firstly an aerial shot of a black kite. 

Black kite, milvus migrans, Khao Yoi, 23.01.10

These birds abound in Khao Yoi and I have read one recent report of several thousand of them roosting in the area. Yesterday we saw about 20 kites today there were about 10 or so. The snap shows the limitations of my equipment but the key diagnostic is the fan tail. The birds in the blog strap are also black kites photographed at Huai Mai Teng Resevoir a few months ago.

Next a female pied harrier, I believe, which was in the same area checking out the kites with a friend. I saw the bird when it was just above the ground and the diagnostic white uppertail-covert band was visible as it cavorted about before soaring off. Unfortunately my camera was in the car when it was just above the ground!


Pied harrier, circus melanoleucos,  Khao Yai 23.01.10

I then headed off to count waterbirds and I couldn't resist this purple swamphen. There were two in a pond but this is the best shot. This is a pretty common bird but I really like its colouring.
Purple swamphen, porphyrio porphyrio,  Khao Yoi 23.01.10

I have to say the Asian Waterbird Census has really been great in terms of my development as a bird watcher. I now understand how difficult it is to count birds due to the amount of movement. Take a disused fish pond......it might contain 1-2,000 birds, most of which are fairly common: black-winged stilt, chinese pond heron, marsh sandpiper, green sandpiper, greenshank, common redshank, spotted redshank, little egret, grey heron and the like. Enter yours truly, and I start counting when all of a sudden the birds fly 100 metres further up the pond to join several hundred similar birds. How do you know which ones you have counted and which ones you don't?! 

Oh and then there are the not insignificant problems of separating the greenshanks from the marsh sandpipers.Well let me say I think I can distinguish marsh sandpipers from greenshanks, the latter have a stouter bill and it has a slight upward tilt. They are also more slender. I have seen so many birds of both species over the last few days I think I can finally separate them. Now a little work on green and wood sandpiper. 

Green sandpiper, tringa ochropus,  Khao Yoi 23.01.10


I headed off in search of raptors at about 17:15h and I wasn't alone. I met a group of Thai birders who had sighted steppe and imperial eagles during the day. I managed a couple of shots of this eastern marsh harrier. I like the one of including a sunset  which for artistic purposes is uncropped!




Eastern marsh harrier, circus spilonotus,  Khao Yai 23.01.10

Not bad birding for a few hours in the afternoon about 30 minutes from home!

Friday 22 January 2010

Common Hoopoe

Common hoopoe, upupa epops, D. Tako, Ratchaburi, 22.01.10

A beautiful, unmistakable hoopoee photographed outside my house. A very welcome winter visitor and a great neighbour. Common?!!

Monday 18 January 2010

Asian Waterbird Census 2010

Such is my commitment to the cause that Saturday I spent the day at BCST 's training in Samut Sakhorn, just to the west of Bangkok for this year's Asian Waterbird Census. It was conducted in Thai with excellent visuals which helped enormously. My Thai is better than most but it wasn't up to this level! I did learn the Thai word for a species! I also learned how to distinguish black-headed gull from brown-headed but, alas, a lot of work needed on terns! The best link to the AWC is probably here on Wetlands International site.

I enjoyed the day enormously. I was impressed to see that over 100 or so mainly young people under 30 had come forward to help in the census and with luck some of them will get the fever! I believe I was the only westerner there. It was also nice to catch up with some of the BCST staff who took us to Khao Yai before Christmas.  Plus I managed a couple of hours birding in nearby Kok Kham which is right on the Inner Gulf and is a major shorebird centre. Lots of bar-tailed godwits, brown headed gulls, lesser sand plovers, curlew sandpiper, broad-billed sandpiper, common greenshank,  common redshank, great egret, little egret but no rarities and no spoon-billed sandpiper! However I got a good tour of the Kok Kham site, a major shorebird area, thanks to some BCST members. This will be invaluable when I return on my own.

Once more a great reminder of the accessibility to and proximity of an excellent shorebird location a little over one hour's drive from home.

Sunday 10 January 2010

Pied Sunday

I paid a first visit to my favourite local birding site, Huai Mai Teng Reservoir, about 35 kms west of Ratchaburi on the road to Suan Phueng and the Myanmar border. My list shows a pied starling, a pied fantail, a pied harrier and a pied kingfisher!

I attach a cropped shot of the pied kingfisher. Unfortunately it was taken about 18:00h and the light was very poor and I was unable to get much closer. The things I could do with a 400 mm lens! The photo has no real merit but it is nevertheless great in terms of helping me with correct identification. I would hate to miss out on a crested kingfisher! Even though the latter is about 10 cms bigger this picture shows the pied has an all black tail and that is for me a key diagnostic. This bird actually put up an excellent show for about 5 minutes as it was feeding; it hovered in warm air and then swooped down to pluck something from the water below it and as it did so it made its quite distinctive shrill sound.

Pied kingfisher, ceryle rudis, Huay Mai Teng Reservoir, Ratchaburi Province, 10.01.10

The pied harrier flew up out of scrub as I walked along. Unfortunately I had my binoculars over my camera strap and a scope/tripod on my shoulder so I was unable to snap it. It was a male with distinctive black head, white body  and black cross section on upperside. This is a bird that fills me with awe but it moved away swiftly. I'd love to get a snap of the male in particular, it just looks like the complete avian killing machine. I also sighted one other unidentified harrier high in the sky but it had gone by the time I had got the bins out!

I guess the pied fantail is very much taken for granted as it is very common. What it has is a beautiful, variable sound, a real songster. It seems to pop up all over the place: deep in Kaeng Krachan, this local reservoir and this photo was taken in our front garden!

pied fantail, rhipidura javanica, Don Tako, Ratchaburi, 31.12.09

Otherwise I am not sure if I sighted a green or a common iora. No photograph. The Oriental Bird Club Image Database doesn't help me to rule it out but what is against me is that it is quite rare and only seen in the south of Thailand. Very green and very disinctive eye ring. I have learned it takes a lot of experience to call some species so in this instance I'll just mark it as a possible!

Now here is a dilemma.....looks like I sighted a rain quail. Unfortunately no picture but I had two of them in my scope as they fed in grass near the reservoir. They didn't come out into the open but they were jumping up presumably to feed off flies. Very distinctive markings and I took time to note their details: "black/gold streaking - vertical, thick; black eye; double line under eye, black, white, black mesial line under chin; black breast." My dilemma is I marked this up as a barred buttonquail! Of course now that I have had a good look at the field book buttonquail have horizontal markings on their breasts and it looks as if the only bird it can be is the rain quail due to the black breast. This is confirmed by the Oriental Bird Image Database. I best try to sight it on my next trip before I claim it!

Not bad really for three hours entertainment mid-afternoon. Add in many commoners, red-mottled lapwing, white-throated kingfisher, black drongo, barn swallow, little egret, green bee-eater, black-headed bulbul, little grebe, black-winged stilt, intermediate egrets....As far as I know I am the only person who covers this location. I think I might make this my patch! I have seen a lot of good birds in this area.

Lovely to be out looking at birds for the first time this year. Unfortunately I have been very busy one way or another.

Saturday 2 January 2010

Review of The Year 2009

What a great year, my first as a birder. My list shows 232 species which is about 25% of the species recorded in Thailand. I should imagine there are easily at least 150 unidentified birds in addition. I really have seen a lot of birds and it stands to reason that as an unaccompanied novice, for most of my birding, that there are a lot of unidentified birds. It's also the case that a number of these unidentifieds have become identified as my knowledge and craft increases. I have seen a lot of raptors in the air but I apply my own criteria before listing one, which is, would I recognise it if I saw it again, and for many of these birds the truthful answer is, no, so it doesn't get listed.


The real story, however, is the diversity of birds in this beautiful country and the many different locations our interest in birds helped us to visit. From Lumphini & Putthamonthon Parks in Bangkok to our local rice paddy in Ratchaburi we looked at birds at every conceivable location in between. It seems wherever you go in Thailand there are great birds nearby.


I set eyes for the first time on the critically endangered spoon-billed sandpiper in the pools of Laem Pak Bia, Phetchaburi province, in November. This is a truly sought after bird and I think it is fair to say it is on the brink of extinction. That's certainly the message coming from the scientific community. There are real issues about the viability of its very specific breeding sites in the Pacific coast of the north eastern Russian Federation: scientists observed one solitary breeding pair this summer. So it was humbling to see this species for the first time, three birds feeding away without an apparent care in the world as to their future.


The mudflats at Laem Pak Bia are one of my favourite sites and it was there in November that I saw Chinese egret for the first time, another rarity, endangered but not to the same extent as the spoon-billed sandpiper. The mudflats have a certain bleakness. I was very pleased to return there a few weeks later and identify the Chinese egret myself thanks to its strange skewed body contortion when it walks and its eye shape. I love looking at the variety of curlews, the whimbrels and other shorebirds that flock in the mudflats most of the year. There are usually a lot of gulls, terns and herons thereabouts, an abundance of collared kingfishers and on one occasion this year I saw a Brahminy kite scavaging on the ground. I'll hopefully make more progress with identifying gulls this year. There are usually some great crested terns on the posts that lead out into the sea from the mudflats. I also have a very badly overexposed photo of an unidentified raptor perched on these posts. In September I spotted a solitary tattler for the first time on these same mudflats. Add in huge numbers of shorebirds.... stints, stilts, sandpipers,  redshanks, greenshanks, plovers. It is a truly amazing place all year round.


The one location that I haven't visited in Laem Pak Bia is the sand spit and I must do this in 2010. Most  reports I read confirm the presence of rare birds there. The Deserted Building and The Kings Projects are likewise great places to view shorebirds in the Laem Pak Bia area and I must have made several visits to both throughout the year; I have seen quite large flocks of painted storks at the former plus on a couple of occasions I was able to witness the very substantial flocks of black-tailed godwits that live there, performing. These would have made brilliant photographs but alas it took me until mid-December to purchase a decent camera. Inadvertently I reported the black-tailed godwits as bar-tailed which had Phil Round on to me immediately seeking confirmation! Oopsadaisy! I have no problem correcting mistakes and did so immediately.


A further highlight of the year was joining a Bird Conservation Society of Thailand boat trip, led by Phil Round, out into the Gulf of Thailand. I was thrilled to see an osprey about which most of my companions were completely indifferent. Inter alia we saw 46 great crested terns, 25 + great cormorants, and 2 Irrawaddy dolphins on this trip. In effect the trip became a master class on terns.


Shorebirds present huge difficulties to a novice like me but with experience and practise I am getting better at making correct identifications. It has also helped enormously to be able to accompany an expert like Phil Round on a couple of occasions. Phil is also very good at explaining practical ways of distinguishing birds like Chinese egret and Nordmann's greenshanks. My efforts have also been hugely assisted by the arrival of decent optics and a copy of Peter Hayman's (et al.) Shorebirds: An Identification Guide. Sadly this publication is out of print, I have a copy of it thanks to the efforts of a mate, Tony.  It has astonishing  depth of coverage and is invaluable in the field; I am surprised it is out of print. I recently learned from it that you can distinguish spotted and common redshank by the amount of red  on their bills: for the spotted the red is confined to their lower mandibles. Invaluable information for me.


Close by Laem Pak Bia and nearer to our home is an area called Khao Yoi in Phetchaburi province. I regularily watch birds at a number of locations in this area. The undoubted highlight was in August when I saw about 80 spot-billed pelicans landing in a fish pond. They were disturbed and flew off before I could count them and I would say my approximate count was understated. I also saw some largish (20-30 birds) flocks of painted stork in this area on a number of occasions. These are beautiful, strange, mysterious birds to look at. I think of High Court judges in their robes when I see painted stork!



Painted stork, mycteria leucocephala, Khao Yoi, 20.08.09


Elsewhere in the Khao Yoi I saw some beautiful birds throughout the year: cotton pygmy-goose, pheasant-tailed jacana, yellow bittern, black bittern, little grebe, pacific golden plover, pink-necked green pigeon, crow-billed drongo, oriental cuckoo, mugimaki flycatcher plus more common birds.


We travelled around a fair amount notwithstanding Luna being pregnant and ultimately giving birth to our son, Benedict, on 7th July 2009. Pre-Benedict, in March, we headed south for a few days to Pranburi in Prachuap Kiri Khan Province...... the Pranburi forest park yielded a significant number of unidentified species but we did see and hear a significant number of green peafowls, a stunning white morph asian pardise flycatcher with its amazingly long tail and the sea shore at Dolphin Bay gave us a beautiful pacific reef egret. A trip to the marsh area of Sam Roi Yot National Park yielded a pair of stunning pied kingfishers. Possibly my favourite species. A few days later we were back on the road south for a trip to Khao Sok National Park in Surat Thani province in the south of Thailand; I didn't manage to see any of the target pittas but we did see a beautiful rufous-backed kingfisher, a tiny ball of bright orange perched on a fence near a stream and a nesting black-naped monarch.




Black-naped monarch, hypothymis azurea, Khao Sok National Park, 31.03.09


In fact I originally recorded this bird as a blue and white flycatcher! Later in the year I saw the same bird elsewhere and with more knowledge of and exposure to the flycatcher genera it was quite clear the bird was not a flycatcher but a monarch:it is the overall colour that stuck in my head and I note from the bird's taxanomic name that it is described as azure. I managed to get the above photo of the original bird wrongly identified.


During this trip we headed to Krabi, on Thailand's western coast, the Andaman sea and also had a few days on Phi Phi island; the highlights here were looking at the  frigate birds which kettle to the south of the islands. Sadly I was unable to identify what particular species they were. Phi Phi also has a very large population of pied imperial pigeons which are very pleasant to view; we did not see any Nicobar pigeons, one of our target species. We also saw this groovy asian glossy starling with its wine red eyes, quite a spectacle. It is a fairly common bird in the south of Thailand.




Asian glossy starling, apolonis panayensis, Koh Phi Phi, 06.05.09


Our next significant trip came in October when Benedict was three months old. We drove south once more, this time to Chumphon, on the Gulf of Thailand coast for The Raptor Watch organised by the Thai Raptor Group , a group of scientists and enthusiasts. The watch is amazing because it is possible to see thousands of raptors; when we visited first time, mainly oriental honey buzzards, but also chinese and japanese sparrowhawks, on their annual southbound migration from the eastern palearctic, that is from Russia east of the Ural mountains. I saw a beautiful lineated barbet and an arctic warbler in the bushes around the raptor watch site. I have to say the warbler was a particular pleasure as I spent about 20 minutes on its identification.


This kicked off a very active spell for us, largely due to school holidays in October. We drove north to Chiang Mai for a few days with an overnight stop in Nakhon Sawan which enabled me to visit Bueng Boraphet. This is a very large lake/swamp which is one of the most important water bird sites in Thailand. On this trip the highlights were a white-browed crake and darter. Our guide advised that the sought after ibises could only be seen in the late afternoon. I had scheduled a morning for Bueng Boraphet and was reluctant to alter this with a hotel booked in Chiang Mai for that same evening.


Our trip north was very much about dipping my toe into the water and I have to say it worked well. I got a real taster of what is possible and of locations. On alternate days I birded in Huai Tueng Tao, Doi Inthanon & Doi Chiang Dao. It was good to be armed with my Thai driver's license and a work ID card because it saved us a fortune on national park entry fees and indeed we even managed to enter Chiang Mai zoo at local rates.


Huai Tueng Tao is a real gem situated just outside Chiang Mai. In fact it is a perfect location for birders and non-birders and there are pleasant restaurants around the reservoir. Thanks in the first instance are to Nick Upton's  www.thaibirding.com but thanks also to Tony Ball's http://thaibirds.blogspot.com. This blog features many entries about the birds at this location. I had a very gentle afternoon there and observed taiga flycatcher, black-collared starling, sooty-headed bulbul, pied bushchat & white wagtail. As befits the world's worst birder, a large number of unidentified birds! What has become of Tony Ball, his blog has not been updated since March 2008?



white wagtail, motacilla alba, Huay Teng Tao, Chiang Mai, 13.10.09

Doi Inthanon was amazing. A bad day weather wise with poor visibility and more reminiscent of a Scottish summer's day on Ben Lomond, Scotland, an hour's drive form Glasgow. Cold, wet, gray and crowded! On the summit we saw dark-backed sibia, chestnut-tailed minla, green-tailed sunbird and flavescent bulbul without making any effort. The first three are all great looking birds, far more exotic than the field books portray them, really amazing colours.



chestnut tailed minla, minla strigula, Doi Inthanon NP, 14.10.09


Lower down the mountain we saw ashy-throated warbler, a hill-blue flycatcher and a black-crested bulbul.


I am almost embarassed to report that on 15.10.09 I saw a forest wagtail in Chiang Mai zoo, suitably playing in the tiger's water pond!


The northern highlight was Doi Chiang Dao, about an hour's drive to the north of Chiang Mai. What a beautiful area, a very striking large mountain with comparatively easy access. I drove up the Muang Kong road and the first bird on my list for the day was eurasian jay, hopping around in the tree tops. Many, many unidentified birds, a possible rufous-winged buzzard inter alia, so I was very pleased with this dark-sided flycatcher below, which posed for me and which I think I have correctly identified.




Dark-sided flycatcher, muscicapa ferruginea, Doi Chiang Dao, 16.10.09

Unfortunately there were many unidentifieds and partials and possibly some quite interesting birds but alas, I would be guessing. Definites on red-whiskered bulbul and a grey-headed canary flycatcher. The bulbul is particularily popular as a caged bird in Thailand so I felt very good at seeing it and many others in the wild. The flycatcher, in my humble opinion, is straight out of the top drawer, a real visual feast of contrasting colours. I think if I taught anything related to fashion or  design I would require all my students to observe birds and their colours.


We headed south from Chiang Mai on the morning of 17.10.09 and I had it in my mind to make a stop at Bueng Boraphet as I desperately wanted to see the ibises. Well I did and it probably was the best birding experience I had in the whole year. Perhaps I might call it my Attenborough moment because I really felt as if I was on a wild life location shoot.


Courtesy of Mr Phanom, Buang Boraphet's resident bird guide/boatman, we were in a perfect location on an island for the arrival of the ibises and as if by appointment they flew in at about 17:20h.  The island was already a hive of activity with flocks of black drongos and white shouldered starlings occupying the lower bushes and the higher trees occupied by asian openbills, little egrets, darters, cormorants, little heron, a couple of purple herons, grey herons, pond herons. The starlings were a truly vivid spectacle as they flew around en masse, their colours changing as they changed direction and the noise level was reminiscent of a David Attenborough documentary. 


I was thinking where are the ibises when in they flew, more than 200 glossy ibises and they came in two strands from both directions and converged in the middle and then flew around for about 15 minutes before settling in the trees. Great views. And then I started thinking where are the black headed ibises and at about 17:45 about 60 flew in; they didn't fly around much and settled almost immediately into the upper tier of the trees. Wonderful birds to look at. We had a setting sun in the west and in front of us a pleasure craft drifted by with a small party of saffron robed monks enjoying the spectacle and into the distance the sun glistened on the golden stupa of temple on a eastern hill top. Dream like stuff really. What a pleasant way to break up the drive from Chiang Mai to Ratchaburi! Ah dream like stuff!


A week later I found myself back in the south of Thailand at The Raptor Watch for a Saturday and saw thousands of migratory black bazas, and two wreathed hornbills, as if for good measure, popped up to say hello.


School camp duties in November took me to Suan Phueng, west of Ratchaburi in the mountains that make the border with Myanmar. I sighted a Burmese shrike in the grounds of our resort with a few of the kids who were very interested in my scope. I saw it late on the Thursday afternoon and only realised my ID was problematic and that I hadn't done enough to eliminate other species. By good fortune the same bird was in the same area early the following morning and I had no doubt I had seen a Burmese shrike.


I didn't travel further afield again until just before Christmas when I joined a Bird Conservation Society of Thailand to Khao Yai National Park. I have to say taking out a membership with BCST was another very sharp move on my part. 1280 baht got me return transport from Bangkok, park entry, three excellent meals and the services of guides and really good spotters plus insurance. Moreover the company was excellent and I would certainly go on more of their trips. The birds were also amazing. At our first stop we saw asian emerald cuckoo and white throated rock thrush from the car park! I reckon the white-throated rock thrush was the most beautiful bird I saw in the whole year. 


The cuckoo was the first bird I photographed using my new camera, it really is a beautiful bird, although clearly a lot of work in the photographic department is required! 




asian emerald cuckoo, chrysococcyx maculatus, Khao Yai National Park, 20.12.09


Soon after we sighted the thrush but it was too far in for my humble lenses so I just had to admire through my scope. We saw approximately 71 species during the day and some of the party saw a real rarity in Japanese thrush; I was happy with an orange-headed thrush, some pied hornbills, a blue rock thrush, a grey-headed canary flycatcher, a blue-eared barbet,  yellow-browed warbler and a two-barred warbler. A  truly great day out, pleasant company and excellent value for money.


Between Christmas and New Year we had a day in Kaeng Krachan National Park which is the subject of its own blog entry.


Outside of these travels I regularily visited Laem Pak Bia, Khao Yoi,  and Huay Mai Teng Reservoir. Two other locations in Ratchaburi province are also worthy of mention and I hope I will be able to see more of them in 2010:  the Khao Prathapchang  Non-hunting Area and The Chaloerm Prakhiat Thai Prachan National Park. 


I have to say the birds of Thailand gave me such a thrill this year. It will be interesting to see how 2010 pans out. I am not sure I will see as many species. I am not sure I will travel as many miles either. That said I hope I can return to Chiang Dao and Doi Inthanon and perhaps some of the other northern locations. No target species, no wishes, just that I continue to have a lot of fun. I hope that I can see birds in a neighbouring country. Maybe the Philippines as my good wife is from there. 






Friday 1 January 2010

Domestic Geese!

I got very excited today because I thought I had observed two swan geese in the pond at Wat Khao Look Chang,  Petchaburi province. I had major doubts because my fieldbooks indicate this is an extremely rare bird in Thailand. However I got snapping and had a good look at the drawings in both my fieldbooks and the more I looked the more I thought this could be the real thing. So I phoned Phil Round, the foremost authority on Thailand's birds, and he advised the geese would likely be  domesticated and that such  breeds have a large knob at the end of their bills. I think the photo show this to be the case!



domesticated swan geese, Wat Khao Look Chang, 01.01.10


This links will take you to an interesting article published by Cornell Lab of Ornithology.  I will quote the author directly:

Whenever I hear about a report of a Greater White-fronted Goose in upstate New York, I always want to hear a few details to assure that the observer (especially a novice observer) did not confuse a domestic goose. (My italics).

The curse of the novice! I guess this encounter is yet another rite of passage in my development as a birder. Yup still wearing my learner plates! I wasted a fair amount of time on these geese which would have been better spent in the forest! You see birding is by no means a cake walk. But it is good to have encountered this issue with domesticated birds because it is inevitable that it was going to intrude at some time.