On 23rd Dec, Gina and I set off
on the beginning of what was to turn into a 6 part- 7-week trip for me adding many
birds to my list. In preparation for the 4 week ranger training course I
was coordinating, I needed to take my open landrover down to Ruaha National Park.
We decided to make the most of the 1200km+ drive and try to maximize on the
number of birds we could see.
Part 1: 23 & 24th December 2012.
Chome Forest:
Our first stop was Chome Nature Reserve in the Pare
Mountains. The Pare Mountains are the northern mountain range of a chain of
isolated forests considered the Galapagos of East Africa or Eastern Arc.
Getting to Chome proved a little more difficult than we expected and the 1.5hr
drive advertised in the brochure turned into a 4hr drive that involved a lot of
4x4 low range diff-lock driving. Now if you’re not familiar with that
terminology, it means we were crawling up slippery and treacherous roads using
everything the car had to get us there. Of course, it had to start raining, and
the new tent I’d made for the trip decided to leak (not to mentioned I’d
forgotten to make tent pegs), and the little stove wouldn’t work… we finally
managed to cook some pasta and sleep dry.
The next morning, bright and early we started looking for
birds. Forest birding is hard, really hard, especially if you don’t know their
calls. Armed with binoculars and my new camera, we managed to get a few good
species including the South Pare White-eye, a small little yellow thing that is
only found in that forest.
Others new to the list included:
·
Bar-throated apalis
·
Waller’s starling
·
Common waxbill
·
Usambara double collared sunbird
Bar-breasted apalis |
Usambara double-collared sunbird |
By 10:30 a.m., looming rain clouds scared us away from the
forest… the road was too treacherous and another downpour might mean we’d be
stranded so we slid down the mountain to the Pangani river where we camped.
Again rain, but the beer in the fridge was cold, and we
found a shelter to cook our dinner so all was well. When we woke in the
morning, the river had flooded its banks and was 3ft from our tent.
Part 2
Pangani
It’s slow going in an open vehicle, especially when the one
cloud in the sky happens to open up directly over you, but with adventurous
spirits we made our way to Ushongo beach south of Pangani for some beach time…
and of course gulls, terns, waders and coastal forest species.
Birds en-route:
·
White-winged widowbird
·
Retz’ helmet shrike
·
Village indigo bird
·
Black & white cuckoo
I must admit I might be a bit color blind because some of
those yellows and oranges look the same to me. Nevertheless, with the help of
non-color blind people, we managed to sort out most of the waders and terns
including:
·
Whimbrel
·
Sooty gull
·
Lesser sandplover
·
Grey plover
·
Sanderling
·
Crab plover
·
Lesser crested tern
·
Common tern
·
Ruddy turnstone
·
Brown noddy
·
Terek sandpiper
·
Long tailed cormorant
·
Mangrove kingfisher
·
Saunder’s tern
·
White-cheeked tern
Around camp:
·
Mouse coloured sunbird
·
Southern banded snake eagle
·
White-throated bee-eater
·
Yellow-throated longclaw
·
Collared sunbird
·
African golden weaver
·
Black bellied starling
A quick morning drive into the forest rewarded us with:
·
Eastern nicator
·
Levant’s sparrowhawk
·
Fisher’s turacco
·
Eastern yellowbill
·
Trumpeter hornbill
·
Black collared barbet
·
Eurasian Golden Oriole
·
Little yellow flycatcher
·
Uluguru violet-backed sunbird
·
Purple-banded sunbird
·
Orange winged pytilia
·
Yellow-rumped tinkerbird
·
Pale batis
Part 3
Getting to Ruaha.
After a week without rain, we climbed back into the landy
and set off toward Morogoro… of course it rained. “Oh, yes, that’s the first
rain we’ve had in weeks,” was our welcome at Mbuyuni farm retreat where we
splurged for a hot shower and clean sheets.
En-route additions to the list:
·
Southern cordon bleu
·
Pin-tailed whydah
·
Indian house crow
·
Dark chanting goshawk
The next morning (2nd January) we drove toward
Iringa, arriving in Mikumi town just as their “first rain in weeks” pelted down
for an hour and a half while we enjoyed WiFi and lunch. Braving looming clouds,
we squeezed through Baobab valley and up the escarpment to Iringa arriving just
in time for more rain. It’s ok if you’re dry, and we managed to stay dry
setting up our tent under a thatch roof. A post-rain walk rewarded us with
African Fin-foot.
Waking up to more rain the next morning, we spent the
morning in Iringa town and decided to not to head to Ruaha until the 4th.
But as Murphy’s Law would have it, it rained even harder the next morning. After
draping everything with garbage bags, we set off, arriving in Ruaha just as the
rain stopped.
While eating lunch on the bridge over the Ruaha river, we
were rewarded with a herd of greater kudu coming down to drink, and with the
background music of hippos grunting, Gina saw her first Giant Kingfisher, a
good tick for my list. Braving other looming clouds we made our way to Mdonya
Old River Camp while enjoying some beautiful views, birds, and mammals.
Part 4
Ruaha National Park
Coordinating some training for rangers in Ruaha, I didn’t
have the time to get to the more distant corners of the park to see some of the
more special birds, but still managed to get a few new species for my list just
within the savannah section that we were in.
Additions to the list:
·
White stork
·
Yellow-billed stork
·
Giant kingfisher
·
Black-lored babbler
·
White pelican
·
Little sparowhawk
·
Senegal coucal
·
Black-bellied bustard
·
Great spotted cuckoo
·
Eastern paradise whydah
·
Black swift
Castle rock and amazing light. |
Part 5
Udzungwa Scarp
With a 1000km drive looming in front of us, Simon Peterson
who had assisted me with training and I arrived in Iringa and quickly jumped on
the opportunity to give a researcher a ride to an isolated forest in the
Udzungwas. Flemming Jensen discovered the Rufous-winged sunbird in the early
80’s, recorded the first Iladopsis and Swynnerton’s robin, all very special
birds. Together with Elia Mulungu who is definitely in the top 5 birders in
Tanzania, and a cook, we drove the 100kms to Uluti on the edge of the Udzungwa
Scarp. A short walk took us to a campsite in the depths of the forest where the
two of them would stay for 2 weeks, measuring birds and taking blood
samples. Simon and I, with our
fingers crossed, stayed 3 nights in the hope of seeing as many birds as
possible.
The landrover that got us there... and tested to its limits. |
With very little access to the national economy, subsistence farmers are always eager for a little extra cash. |
On the edge of the forest- farming all the way up to the edge. |
Looking south... |
In the hand:
·
African Broadbill- a fun bird that makes an
awesome sound with its wings as it flies a tight circle advertising its
territory.
·
Dapple throat- a very rare bird that’s in its
own family. This bird is thought to be most closely related to the first
passerines that colonized Africa from Australia.
·
Swynnerton’s robin- a beautiful little bird
·
Evergreen forest warbler- more often heard than
seen
·
Fulleborn’s boubou- a bird that doesn’t like to
be caught in a net
·
Bar-tailed trogon- truly a gem, related to the
Quetzals of Costa Rica
·
Square-tailed drongo
·
Yellow-streaked greenbul
·
Forest batis- a real beauty
·
Collared sunbird
·
Olive sunbird
·
Spot-throat- another rare bird
·
White chested alethe- another beautiful bird
that’s hard to see
·
Shelley’s greenbul- a generic bird
·
Orange ground thrush
·
African hill babbler
·
Fulleborn’s sunbird (formerly known as double
collared sunbird)
·
Tamborine dove
·
Udzungwa iladopsis (currently being split from
Pale-breasted)
·
Iringa akalat (Iringa ground robin)
·
Yellow-throated woodland warbler
·
Lemon dove
·
Cabanis greenbul
Heard and seen:
·
Livingston’s turacco
·
Bronze-naped pigeon
·
White-tailed Crested flycatcher
·
Black-throated bushshrike (Many-colored
bushshrike)
·
Waller’s starling
·
Silvery-cheeked hornbill
·
Black-headed apalis
·
Chapin’s apalis
·
African taylor bird (a cool little warbler that
sews leaves together to make a nest)
·
White winged apalis- a beautiful and rare little
bird
·
Grey cuckoo-shrike
·
Dark-backed weaver
·
Rufous-winged sunbird
·
Mountain buzzard
Shelley's greenbul |
Dapple-throat (Dappled Mountain Robin) |
White-chested alethe |
Swynerton's robin |
Broadbill |
Forest batis |
Iringa akalat (Iringa ground robin) |
Iladopsis (Udzungwa) |
Spot-throat |
Fulleborn's boubou |
Lemon dove |
Part 6
Getting home
Having capitalized on the forest bird experts, Simon and I
were relieved to get out of Uluti before rain would have stranded the car until
the dry season. Ready to get home, we wanted one last try at some Miombo birds.
On our way
toward Mikumi, we spent a night in a campsite on the Pangani river before
cutting north along the Mikumi-Kilosa road. It was nice to be out of the forest
and able to easily see birds again and we quickly got some new species for the
list.
·
Rufous bellied tit
·
White-headed black chat (Arnot’s chat)
·
Olive thrush
·
White-bellied cuckoo shrike
·
Peter’s twinspot
·
Crested barbet
·
Golden-tailed woodpecker
Pushing on, we headed towards Handeni, horrified and
saddened at all the slash and burn clearing that was making way for farms.
Finding an isolated bit of Miombo we set up camp adding a few gems including:
·
Barred owlet
·
Yellow bellied hyliota
·
Miombo wren warbler
·
Pale-billed hornbill
·
Brown necked parrot
Arnott's chat |
Barred-owlet |