Sunday 30 January 2011

A Dead Barn Owl

Not much to write about as I have been in Bangkok the last three days on a training course. Some sad news. Friday morning I saw an injured Barn Owl at 06:15 am near the bins (trash, garbage)  not far from our house.  Dark but I caught the owl in my headlights on the ground and it moved rapidly away when it became aware of my presence. I could see the owl couldn't fly and it headed into the scrub. I have never held an owl, wouldn't know how to and in fact all I know is it could hurt your hands and arms,  plus I  have nowhere to put it if I could have safely got it under my control. So I decided there was little I could do there and then other than leave it and hope. On return home I searched but couldn't find it and thought maybe it had managed to get away. Saturday morning I searched again but no sign but in the evening, on my return from Bangkok,  a dead owl was lying on the street and its carcass had been flattened by vehicles. I presume the soi dogs had got it and killed it. Maybe not. Maybe humans had killed it. The locals regard owls as harbingers of death and so owls are persecuted and the more common species such as the Barn Owl, can often be found in temples' grounds where the Buddhist mantra on not killing any life form applies. Maybe this owl had simply keeled over, tired and exhausted....  I was sad that I hadn't been able to do more for this bird. I also notice that our Red-collared Dove has abandoned its nest. I wonder what has happened. It's not always about appreciating the sublime beauty of these creatures...... I think I better get a cage and learn how to handle raptors and birds of prey.

Wednesday 26 January 2011

Local Birds


Plaintive Cuckoo - Female Hepatic Morph Variant (?)
Ratchaburi 25.01.11

I headed home with the sole objective of getting out for an hour of good light to photograph some of the local birds that are in the rice paddy at present. For instance last night I thought I could distinguish Paddyfield and Richard's Pipit, there were Red-throated Pipits, Yellow Wagtails, Sparrows and lots of Pied Starlings, Common Mynas and Cattle Egrets in hundreds. I did not bring my camera last night so I thought they would be back tonight, you know, waiting for me, posing! Alas no. A few Black Kites, hundreds of egrets but not the same range of small birds. I was also being a bit of a dope with the camera, just missing shots and there was quite a lot of noise around me as I was in a new area and people were asking me what I was doing. Anyhow I managed a couple of shots of this female Plaintive Cuckoo and now I have looked at the field guide I reckon it is the Hepatic Morph Variant on account of the light underparts.

Tuesday 25 January 2011

Tokyo Stopover by Brian Casatelli

All photographs in this article are © Brian Casatelli
 
Japanese White Eye
Oriental Greenfinch
Azure-winged Magpie

On our way back to the US form Thailand we stopped in Tokyo for a few days to visit friends and managed to squeeze in a little bird-watching. Weather conditions could hardly have been more different from Thailand; by day temperatures in Tokyo were never higher than 8º C and at night between 0-3º C. In other words it was freezing!

Brown-eared Bulbul

Northern Goshawk


Our first birding visit was a morning spent at the Meiji Shrine on 3rd January which can be easily reached by public transport. This was the last of the public holidays for the New Year and we were prepared for it being quite crowded. It was even more crowded than that!  Because of the crowds, the entrances into the forest were roped off by the police who did a good job with the crowd control. There probably were other places to go in the park, but leaving the train station we found ourselves in the middle of the procession to the shrine and just went with the flow.

Common Pochard
Northern Goshawk
We saw a number of nice birds. I noticed right away that the birds were the most approachable I have ever come across (with the exception of Azure-winged Magpie which I encountered the next day).  They came right up to the path unconcerned with the thousands of people marching towards the shrine right next to them.  We saw Eastern Great Tit, hawfinch, the lovely Japanese white-eye (that turned out to be quite common and easy to see), oriental turtle dove, Japanese pygmy woodpecker, Brown-eared bulbul, Carrion and Large-billed crows, and what I think was a Varied Tit.

Black Kite
Brown-eared Bulbl
We wound up walking right past the shrine.  It was not the 'grand' building we were expecting but was located in what we thought was the entrance to the shrine.  We only realized we had passed it when we realized we were walking down the exit path.  That was ok, we were ready to move on to Ueno Park to see what waterfowl were there.

White-cheeked Starling
Dusky Thrush

The pond in the park is located next to the zoo and was quite nice.  There we saw Black-headed, Slaty-backed, Black-tailed and one as of yet unidentified gull.  We also saw Tufted duck, northern pintail, northern shoveler, common coot, little grebe, eurasion wigeon, common pochard, the two crow species, brown-eared bulbul, eurasion tree sparrow, and good old rock dove.  

White Wagtail

Later in the day, we saw white wagtail on the grounds outside the Imperial Palace which we weren't able to enter because of the holiday.

Black-necked Grebe

Tuesday 4th January we squeezed in a last scheduled, morning of birding. We went to Kasai Rinkai Koen.  Koen means park.  It's at the top end of Tokyo bay across from Tokyo Disneyland.  There is a park area and then a coast that offers a nice variety of birds to be seen.  The list here included the usual suspects plus oriental greenfinch, azure-winged magpie, white-cheeked starling, spot-billed duck, great cormorant, kentish plover, common sandpiper, one unidentified "peep", greater scaup, little egret, dusky thrush, black-necked grebe, northern goshawk.

Carrion Crow

That was it for the scheduled birding, but there were some incidentals in the following days.  In our jaunt to Kyoto, we saw Mallard and Grey Heron on the grounds of the Golden Temple.  In Kamakura, we saw Black-eared Kite, which I am not sure is a separate species or subspecies of Black-kite.  Finally on the last day before our flight home to New York, my friends father took me to a park along the coast in Yokohama.  After a long freezing wait because we got there too early, we had half an hour of daylight before we had to leave and I saw one more species, and lifer: Eurasian teal.

Eastern Spot-billed Duck
People seemed mindful of conservation everywhere we went. People turned off their engines when stopped at a traffic light.  Buses turned off theirs when stopped at a bus stop also.Over all the trip to Japan was great.  We had a wonderful mix of local flavor, big city, train rides, great food, birding, and overall great experience.  But if you decide to go, do bring some cash. It is incredibly expensive and non-Japanese credit cards don't always work.  I was able to check off 15 lifers in the short trip, so I think it was a success. More information about birding in Japan in English is available here

Eurasian Wigeon
Large-billed Crow

Note: Brian Casatelli is a New York based birder/photographer who recently visited Thailand and we shared a very enjoyable day's birding at Bueng Boraphet. He sent me some photos of his stopover in Tokyo and I am very happy to be able to publish them here. I'll happily consider any offerings for this blog in the spirit of putting birding information into the public domain.

Monday 24 January 2011

Black Kite Bonanza

Red-throated Pipit
Ratchaburi 24.01.11

On arrival home this afternoon after school I was delighted to see Mummy Scaly-breasted Munia and Baby out of the nest and Mummy teaching Baby how to fly. I do not know about Baby 2 but there wasn't any sign of it; maybe in the nest. Upstairs in the veranda the Red-collared Dove according to our housekeeper is sitting on two eggs: I don't know how she knows this but that's what she says!

Black Kite
Ratchaburi 24.01.11 

Encouraged by this activity I headed round to the rice paddy and a few moments later I was attracted by an unusual shape perched on a pole in a field. I wondered if this might be a Common Kestrel so had a look and in fact it turned out to be nothing more than a strangely shaped piece of wood! However I was immediately struck by the sight of two large birds cavorting mid-air and a few seconds later I knew these were Black Kites and a closer look revealed a further 3 kites on the ground and this fellow perched on a pole, making six kites in total.

 Black Kite
Ratchaburi 24.01.11 
I did something quite clever by my standards! I was still far enough away so I got set up and then drove into the rice paddy and got behind the setting sun with the bird in front of me. I managed to use my truck for cover and managed to click away from about 60 metres. I have to say I am pleased with the results. These kites are pretty common in the locale but I never tire of them.

Black Kite
Ratchaburi 24.01.11 

I know nothing about the rice cultivation cycle but in recent weeks the rice has been harvested, the remnants eaten up by ducks, the remaining stalks have been burned, and now the soil has been tilled and in some places watered prior to replanting. It is therefore a feeding bonanza for birds and in among the hundred of cattle egrets, intermediate egrets and other birds was a small flock of Red-throated Pipits, 5 or 6 birds. Alas the sun had set and it was pretty gloomy so my photographs are poor. However common these Pipits may be they were lifers for me. In the same part of the paddy there was a lot of Wood Sandpiper, a few Common Sandpiper and a Spotted Redshank; I don't recall seeing a Redshank before in the local area. 

So not a bid hour after work!

An Unsuccessful Twitch

Coppersmith Barbet
Kaeng Krachan 23.10.11

With a huge amount of pressure on my time right now I decided to try to twitch the reported Spot-billed Starlings on Sunday afternoon, my free time this week. These birds have been seen in the Kaeng Krachan National Park area and I opted to go look for them as opposed to eagles, vultures and shorebirds. I am sorry to report that I dipped on them. I am pretty sure I didn't miss them as I got to the location at about 4:30 pm and had a good scout around. A fair few Bronzed Drongos and a few Coppersmith Barbets but not much else. Fortunately a mere 240 km round trip which I am sure hardly registers on the Richter scale of unsuccessful twitches! My reward was a lovely drive up into the mountains and a real sense of how beautiful Thailand is and how lucky I am to live here. I should mention that in the day's embers I watched a flock of 50-60 Pied Hornbills flying across the sky. How lucky I am indeed! I must explore Kaeng Krachan more: I don't because it gets very busy at weekends and dodging traffic is not my idea of birding. I am completely tied up this weekend on a course but fortunately that will be the end of it and the summer holidays are in sight!

Wednesday 19 January 2011

Plain-backed Sparrow: A Misnomer?

Plain-backed Sparrow
19.01.11

I have to say how much I am enjoying snatching an hour's birding here and there in my neighbourhood and being able to look more closely at the more common birds. In and around the local rice paddy there is an abundance of these plain-backed sparrows and surely no bird would be more entitled to feel resentful at being given such a misleading name. Plain it ain't! I have to say the field guide drawing doesn't really do these birds very much justice! A real beauty in fact with a degree of considerable subtlety in its plumage.

I did my bit for the kingdom of birds this morning. We found two Scaly-breasted Munia fledglings on the ground close to their nest in our pomegranate tree. I suspect there was nothing more to their presence there than an unsuccessful attempt at flying, as opposed to a predatory attack. So I picked them up and returned them to the nest. I didn't photograph them as it was still dark but they were really tiny but didn't appear too distressed by being handled. I am glad to say just before we left to go to work Mummy flew in hopefully with some breakfast for her cares. Elsewhere we have a Red-collared Dove nicely settled in a lamp holder on our upper balcony and no doubt she will produce a few fledglings in due course.

There is an amazing spectacle to behold on the local rice paddy and no doubt everywhere else in Thailand at the moment. Thousands of domestic ducks are being fattened up on the remnants of the recently harvested rice crop. There is a major increase in the demand for duck during the period of The Chinese New Year which begins on 3rd February this year. (The Chinese New Year is a big event here in Thailand and many businesses will be closed for instance.) The ducks make an amazing sight and indeed sound and sometimes there can be upwards of 10,000 ducks in one flock. I suspect their presence and particularly that of their human minders keeps away the raptors; no doubt one of the key responsibilities of the minders is to chase off birds of prey.

Tuesday 18 January 2011

Asian Koel: Often Heard, not Always Seen!


Well here is a first venture into Video using the digiscope rig......videoscoping. The Asian Koel can be heard virtually everywhere in Thailand including the heart of Bangkok. You are more likely to have heard it than to have seen it. Anyway it posed for me on an otherwise lacklustre trip round to the local rice paddy so as I have been meaning to try video here is a first offering. The quality is not brilliant but it makes me think what would be possible with a HD camera. And below a couple of still photographs of the same fellow.


Monday 17 January 2011

The Last Few Days

Barn Swallow - EOS

Alas wretched work commitments mean birding, photography and blogging have to take a second place! Of course I can still manage some birding but just a little. I'll leave these pics of some common birds that I have seen these last few days. News from the major sites is that a Cinereous Vulture remains in the Wat Norng Blah Lai area though no recent sightings of the Himalyan Griffons. In Kaeng Krachan Spot-winged Starlings have been sighted fairly regularily since Christmas. This represents a new record this far south for Thailand.
Scaly-breasted Munia -EOS (front garden)

Zitting Cisticola - EOS

Lotus flowers - digiscoped

Little Egret - digiscoped

Purple Heron - digiscoped

Pied Kingfisher - digiscoped

There are plenty of good birds locally. Yesterday we saw a fair few black-shouldered kites, a black kite and green-billed Malkoha as we toured around the Huay Mai Teng reservoir and its surrounds. Tonight a quick half-hour at the loca rice paddy produced a female Pied Harrier and a Common Kestrel plus Yellow-Rumped and Plain Prinias and an Oriental Reed Warbler. At the school camp, notiwthstanding the racket created by 200 + kids, an unidentified phylloscopus warbler, possibly an Arctic, and one other, two-barred but thereafter who knows and a very pretty Ashy Drongo. I was very pleased to get the digiscope onto the birds for both of the photographs below; the warblers move at speed and the drongo was equally swift. 

Phylloscopus Warbler - unidentified

Ashy Drongo

Thursday 13 January 2011

A Common Hoopoe

I am up in Suan Phueng, Ratchaburi province towards the Myanmar border for the school camp. Suan Phueng is a mountain resort and is very popular with weekend escapees from Bangkok. It is also popular for school camps during the week. It's up and coming too and there is an enormous amount of development.

On the way up I stopped at Huay Mai Teng Reservoir and photographed this very obliging Common Hoopoe. It's not an uncommon bird here in Thailand but my colleagues and students were very impressed. It is a beautiful bird on the eye, very distinctive and I am reasonably happy with the photograph.

There are some good birds around including some phylloscopus warblers and other little brown ones. A common tailorbird, many olive-backed sunbirds and the very distincitve and characteristic noise of There was also a very elegant sunbird or spider hunter, olive with dark blue/purple back and a very long bill. Unfortunately I left my fieldbook at home and they were all too fast for me to photograph. I'll try again tomorrow.

Sunday 9 January 2011

Some Notes

Purple Heron
Bang Tung Jak
Phetchaburi 9.01.11

My wife, my son and I took a trip down memory or rather "Drongo" Lane today, Sunday 9th January 2011, just off the Phetchkasem Highway to the north of Phetchaburi town.  This is where we went birding for the first time in Thailand two years ago, probably to the day. I think we saw and recognised a lot more species today than we did back then but there will still 3 unidentified little brown jobs and these were not obvious species either! But I saw a Yellow Bittern flash past and hide itself in the marshes and I knew what the bird was immediately and I guess that is the indicator of progress over these last two years.

I like the picture of the Purple Heron, a digiscoped image . I was so lucky just to capture the shots as this is a very delicate and shy bird and usually takes off at the slightest disturbance. I managed to take up position with cover from some reeds and was able to get a few decent shots dodging the reeds which were partially blocking my view. I am sure I wouldn't have seen the bird two years ago and I wouldn't have been able to get the image 4 months ago. Progress on all fronts!
Common Snipe
Bang Tung Jak
Phetchaburi 9.01.11


There was no sign of Himalayan Griffons or Cinereous Vultures at Wat Norng Blah Lai but there were Imperial, Steppe, Greater Spotted and Booted Eagles. 

At home in our postage stamp front garden we have a Scaly-breasted Munia nest in the Pomegranate Tree and the Tree Sparrows are desperately trying to get into it; we had a female Scarlet-backed Flowerpecker in the tree yesterday. Upstairs in our balcony we have a Red-collared Dove building a nest. Maybe I should stay home! Must rig a camera up and watch this develop.

The Birds of Wat Norng Blah Lai

Himalayan Griffon
Gyps himalayensis
Wat Norng Blah Lai, Phetchaburi 
January 2011


A photo essay by my friend Wich'yanan Limpaяungpatthanakij (ป่าน วิชญนันท์) who sent me these photographs of some of the birds he has photographed in the Wat Norng Blah Lai area since the beginning of the year.

© Wich'yanan Limpaяungpatthanakij (ป่าน วิชญนันท์)
Cinereous Vulture
Aegypius Monachus
Wat Norng Blah Lai, Phetchaburi 
January 2011

This is an exciting time for birders in Thailand as two Himalayan Griffons were seen on Friday 7th January 2011. A "restaurant" has been set up in an attempt to lure the birds down to the ground; Chaiyan Kasorndorkbua and his colleagues from The Thai Raptor Group  are poised to catch the bird and fit a radio transmitter to it so we can monitor its movements and start to learn more about it. The Cinereous Vulture is still in the area too.

© Wich'yanan Limpaяungpatthanakij (ป่าน วิชญนันท์)
Booted Eagle - dark morph
Aquila Pennata 
Wat Norng Blah Lai, Phetchaburi 
January 2011


© Wich'yanan Limpaяungpatthanakij (ป่าน วิชญนันท์)
Booted Eagle -pale morph
 being mobbed by Jungle Crows
Aquila Pennata
Wat Norng Blah Lai, Phetchaburi 
January 2011

© Wich'yanan Limpaяungpatthanakij (ป่าน วิชญนันท์)
Booted Eagle -pale morph
Aquila Pennata
Wat Norng Blah Lai, Phetchaburi 
January 2011

© Wich'yanan Limpaяungpatthanakij (ป่าน วิชญนันท์)
Greater Spotted Eagle
Aquila Clanga
Wat Norng Blah Lai, Phetchaburi 
January 2011
© Wich'yanan Limpaяungpatthanakij (ป่าน วิชญนันท์)
Greater Spotted Eagle
Aquila Clanga
Wat Norng Blah Lai, Phetchaburi 
January 2011
© Wich'yanan Limpaяungpatthanakij (ป่าน วิชญนันท์)
 Greater Spotted Eagle
Aquila Clanga
Wat Norng Blah Lai, Phetchaburi 
January 2011
© Wich'yanan Limpaяungpatthanakij (ป่าน วิชญนันท์) 
from left to right: Eastern Imperial Eagle, Steppe Eagle & Cinereous Vulture
Aquila Heliaca, a. nipalensis & Aegypius Monachus
Wat Norng Blah Lai, Phetchaburi 
January 2011
© Wich'yanan Limpaяungpatthanakij (ป่าน วิชญนันท์)
 Eastern Imperial Eagle
Aquila Heliaca
Wat Norng Blah Lai, Phetchaburi 
January 2011
© Wich'yanan Limpaяungpatthanakij (ป่าน วิชญนันท์)
 Steppe Eagle
Aquila Nipalensis
Wat Norng Blah Lai, Phetchaburi 
January 2011
© Wich'yanan Limpaяungpatthanakij (ป่าน วิชญนันท์) 
Pied Harrier
Circus Melanoleucos
Wat Norng Blah Lai, Phetchaburi 
January 2011
© Wich'yanan Limpaяungpatthanakij (ป่าน วิชญนันท์)
 Eastern Marsh Harrier
Circus Spilonotus
Wat Norng Blah Lai, Phetchaburi 
January 2011
© Wich'yanan Limpaяungpatthanakij (ป่าน วิชญนันท์) 
Black-shouldered Kite
Elanus Caeruleus
Wat Norng Blah Lai, Phetchaburi 
January 2011
© Wich'yanan Limpaяungpatthanakij (ป่าน วิชญนันท์) 
Brahminy Kite -juvenile
Haliastur Indus
Wat Norng Blah Lai, Phetchaburi 
January 2011
© Wich'yanan Limpaяungpatthanakij (ป่าน วิชญนันท์) 
Black Kite
Milvus Lineatus
Wat Norng Blah Lai, Phetchaburi 
January 2011
© Wich'yanan Limpaяungpatthanakij (ป่าน วิชญนันท์)
Common sand-martin
Riparia riparia
Wat Norng Blah Lai, Phetchaburi 
January 2011

If you are a visiting birder this site can be reached very easily on the main south bound road from Bangkok to Laem Pak Bia/ Kaeng Krachan. In fact it is signed as "EAGLE VIEWPOINT" and if you follow those signs they will get you there. However there is no real advance warning and there are many, many signs! Look at for the crags of Khao Yoi on your left hand side as you drive south; they are unmistakeable as they are the only crags you will pass. About 4 km after these crags  you will see the "EAGLE VIEWPOINT" sign pointing left. 


Finally all credit for this goes to Paarn .... a truly outstanding achievement and let me once more thank him for permission to use his photographs.