Showing posts with label Masked Shrike. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Masked Shrike. Show all posts

Tuesday, 29 May 2018

Cyprus - our final day of birding...

This afternoon I've finally had the chance to edit the last of my photos from Cyprus, taken on our last day's birding of the holiday (back on the 7th of April).

We spent the day around the Aphrodite Trail and the Baths of Aphrodite at the start of the Akamas Peninsular, and we managed a great selection of birds...

Of course the first birds we got on arrival were the Eastern Olivaceous Warblers which were not hard to find around the entrance to the caravan park. An Eastern Bonelli's Warbler was also calling and singing in the gully. An Isabelline Wheatear was the first we'd seen here, and when we reached the north end a stunning first-summer male Pallid Harrier flew over.

We next started the 7.5km round walk of the Aphrodite Trail. It led out across the scrubby hillsides, reaching the top of the hills and descending down the very steep cliffs. Cyprus Wheatears were the most obvious bird throughout, and we estimated seeing 15 on the walk. Serins were also in the upland woodlands, a bird which didn't seem very easy to see at lower altitudes.

When we reached the highest point of the hills, we picked up a falcon close to us, and were really surprised to see a pale morph Eleonora's Falcon - a lifer we thought we'd be much too early to get. 3 Masked Shrikes were also up here, and I finally managed to see Cretzschmar's Bunting with 2 singing males, which was the last of my targets.

Other sightings included a first-summer Steppe Buzzard, Hoopoe and our only Meadow Pipit of the trip, while the nearby Smygies Picnic Site gave us more Cyprus Wheatears and two day-calling Cyprus Scops Owls.

First-summer male Pallid Harrier

Eastern Olivaceous Warblers

Cretzschmar's Bunting

Masked Shrike
Steppe Buzzard
Isabelline Wheatear

Cyprus Wheatears
Eleonora's Falcon - very distant at this point!

Red-rumped Swallow
Eastern Bonelli's Warbler - call and song

Saturday, 12 May 2018

Cyprus - Paphos Headland...

On our Cyprus trip we spent one day at Paphos Headland, where despite there not being very many migrants, there was a nice variety.

One of the first birds was a female Ruppell's Warbler which was one of our main targets for the trip, while other birds around the headland included a Thrush Nightingale, Black-eared Wheatear, Masked ShrikeEastern Subalpine Warbler and 4 Purple Herons in off.

Commoner birds included Nightingales, Spanish Sparrows and Corn Buntings.

On the way home a nice surprise was an early Roller sat on some roadside wires.


Purple Herons

Masked Shrike
Spanish Sparrow


Corn Bunting - adult and juvenile. 

Tuesday, 17 April 2018

Cyprus - Birding around the villa...

After our morning of the second day at the Baths of Aphrodite, we spent the afternoon in and around our villa in Latchi, and the birding there was actually surprisingly good!

We'd noticed a scrubby area over the back fence and with a decent flock of sparrows we decided to check it out. One of the first birds we saw in the sparrow flock was a male Spanish Sparrow - a lifer we'd really hoped to get on the trip. We spent a while watching the group which in the end contained 5+ males and probably a similar number of females.

We moved to the next bushes and I saw a bird perched on the edge. Raising the bins we were pleased to see a female Masked Shrike, another new one for us. Other sightings in the area just over our back fence included a pair of Cyprus WheatearsSardinian Warblers, Fan-tailed Warblers, Crested Larks and a Hoopoe.

Later in the afternoon, a Black Francolin started calling from the field behind the villa, and we decided to check it out. We followed a small track up into the field and two Francolins were calling, one from just a few metres away, and despite the close range seemed impossible to get a view of. Eventually, my dad managed to pick it up in the field margin, although it quickly vanished again. He headed back inside, while I stayed on the track a bit longer. It reappeared and showed really well, without disappearing.

In the evening a steady passage of Swallows took place overhead, and a group of 40+ Red-rumped Swallows were great to see.

Black Francolin and recording below





Spanish Sparrows
Masked Shrike
Fan-tailed Warbler
Cyprus Wheatear
Sardinian Warbler
Starred Agama