Showing posts with label Boats. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Boats. Show all posts

Wednesday 18 March 2015

Into Portugal, Tavira and back into Spain for the 'Bonanza' experience... displaying Booted Eagles, Spoonbills and Kites plus new migrants

My last 2 or 3 weeks here and the journey back north through Spain starts with a journey into Portugal to pick up my buddy Mark from Faro airport. Slightly dodgy start with a police fine of 30 euros for parking where I shouldn't have at the airport but great to catch up and have some company and banter along the way.

Tavira and Castro Marim being the obvious destinations before heading back into Spain and the salt pans of Sanlucar de Barremeda & Bonanza.




Spotted Redshank, Tavira (12th March 2015)
Tavira is part and parcel Algarve, part tourist, part good estuarine birding, always a good spot for waders with  Redshank, Whimbrel, Curlew, Dunlin, Sanderling, Little Stint, Ringed & Little Ringed Plovers  all in good numbers plus a good Spotted Redshank and another first for the trip ..  those legendary travellers - Bar Tailed Godwits.


Bar Tailed Godwits, Tavira



Whimbrel, Tavira (12th March 2015)
Sandwich Tern, Tavira
We searched in vain for a different tern species and did get a few Caspian Terns but in the main it was Sandwich Terns that were passing.

Further east towards the Spanish border a failed attempt to access the Castro Marim parc natural because of roadworks and diversions, took us instead to the fishing village of Villareal de Santa Antonio where we saw 100s of passing Gannets, some of them no doubt bound for UK breeding grounds, a few Great Skuas and some Pallid Swifts in off the sea.















Of human interest here were the activities of the many local shellfishers ... stretching as far as the eye could sea across the shallow estuary. One of the few times my 400m lens has come out for a landscape pic!

Shellfishers of Villareal de Santa Antonio
Nice place for a boat too .....

Villareal de San Antonio





The saltpans of Sanlucar/ Bonanza and the adjacent forests of parcel pine (or algeida) are old and favourite haunts of mine and Mark's. They make up the part of the mighty Donana reserve on the other side of the Guadalquiver river and although only a relatively short distance along the coast from where we were in Portugal, to get there involves a drive all the way to Sevilla and then down the other side of the river - 3 hrs!
 
 
 
On yer bike Mark! Bonanza
 
 
 
 
 
 

Worth it though. The weather was hot, the birds plentiful and Mark discovered he quite liked riding around on my bike!
 
 
So much to see here as always .... skies full of displaying Booted Eagles, Storks and migrant Black Kites, nesting Grey Herons and Spoonbills, flocks of Night Herons and to cap it all off 3 new migrants - Subalpine Warbler,a single Willow Warbler amongst the many wintering Chiffchaffs and 1 singing Nightingale.

 
 
Nesting Spoonbills, Bonanza, 16/03/15


White Storks nest building, Bonanza, 16/03/15


Black Kite overhead, Bonanza, 16/03/15


Black Kite, Bonanza, 16/03/15


Black Stork, Bonanza, 16/03/15


Willow Warbler, Bonanza, 16/03/15
 
 
Tricky to convey the majesty of displaying Booted Eagles in a hot blue sky but here's a pair circling together - a dark phase female and a light phase male.


















Booted Eagle display flight





.... and the same male performing, soaring up, curling himself into a ball and then diving down in an almost vertical stoop before repeating in a series of looping soars and dives. Pretty awesome to see, the first time I've managed to photograph the event and these pics don't do the show any justice at all!
 
 


Booted Eagle display flight
 
 
 
 
 

Narcissus (wild daffodil), Bonanza, 16/03/15
Spring flowers like these Narcissus or wild Daffodil look as if they've been out for a week or so, in fact some seem to have 'gone over'

The other flower is Halimium, a kind of rock rose and a flowering shrub that dominates and covers the scrubland in places with gorgeous yellow blooms.




Halimium, Bonanza, 16/03/15


We searched in vain, as we always do, for a Western 'British' type Yellow Wagtail on passage but all seen, and there were a lot, were all of the Blue headed race. Jolly nice to see flitting about everywhere though!

Yellow Wagtail (Iberian / Blue headed), Bonanza, 16/03/15


























Night Herons, Bonanza, 16/03/15 ... not the best of pics but never seen a flock this big!
 
 
Other good birds seen here but not photographed included Long Eared and Tawny Owl, Purple Swamphen, Osprey, 20 or so Marsh Harriers, Ruff, Tree & Spanish Sparrows and Calandra Larks.
 
Onto Extramudra next and our first point of call will be the plains of Serena, the biggest area of uncultivated land in Western Europe!
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 


Sunday 15 February 2015

El Fondo memories and a new haunt at El Pinet, a place to rest up in the company of Eagles, Waders, Shrikes, Gulls & friendly birders

14 - Pego / Marjal: 15 - El Fondo: 16 - El Pinet: 17 - Segura River: 18- Santa Pola saltpans
 
For the past week or so, me and my van have been camped out at El Pinet, few kilometres away from the notable, if restricted from an access point of view, reserve at El Fondo. Restricted it may be but it brought me a 'lifer' and lets start with that' ... my first ever Greater Spotted Eagle. A bird of the Baltic states and Northern Asia, a handful over winter in Spain and what a glorious sight it was to see it soaring high over El Fondo.  Many thanks to Graham Critchell and his mate Gordon for pointing me in the right direction and enabling me to capture this aquiline monster, even if it was a kilometre away!
 

timbobagginsabroad, spain,
Greater Spotted Eagle, El Fondo, Feb 2015
timbobagginsabroad, spain, birds,
Booted Eagle, Pego, Feb 2015

Perched their size can be misleading, but with a wingspan of nearly 6 feet, in flight they are monstrous and to me akin to a Black Vulture in their sheer presence. At one point this bird was being mobbed by a Booted Eagle (pic right) and then a Peregrine, both of which it dwarfed!


timbobagginsabroad, birds, travel, rare bird,
Audouin's Gull, Segura River, Guadamar (9/02/2015)
Just before I landed at El Fondo and the surrounding good birding areas just south of Alicante, I paid a brief visit to Marjal de Pego-Oliva a smallish but very undisturbed little reserve nr the village of Pego.  Here I finally caught up with my first Audouin's Gulls of the trip.

Restricted to the Med and N.Africa this is one of the rarest gulls in the world with around 10,000 prs, but on the East coast of Spain they can be seen quite readily. My hurried pic at Pego was useless ...this is a better one taken some days later along the Segura River at Guadamar.


Pego itself is a small hillside town that I didn't go into (it looked a bit exclusive!) but the reed fringed reserve was just a delight to walk around. All the usual birds were here and  I got my first Wood Sandpiper, broke some records for numbers .. like appx 50 Bluethroats and maybe 200 Chiffchaffs in the wet fields and reeds.





Pego & surrounding reedbeds (1/02/2015)


Marjal de Pego-Oliva


timbobagginsabroad, spain, road trip
In amongst the reeds at Marjal / Pego reserve... a great spot for lunch!



Marsh Harriers encircling and mobbing a Booted Eagle, Marjal-Oliva (02/02/2015)
I counted a total of 6 Marsh Harriers here and at one point they were all in the air together, calling and shrieking like demented harpies. I've rarely heard them call and this was an exceptional racket ... I later figured out after seeing a departing and very harassed big bird that they were in fact all mobbing a grounded Booted Eagle!










Marsh Harrier calling / mobbing behaviour, Marjal-Oliva (02/02/2015)





timbobagginsabroad, spain, road trip
Booted Eagle, Pego / Marjal. (2/02/2015)


























Booted Eagles themselves are relatively common around the whole area and always great to see cruising around but perched they tend to look a bit 'scruffy'!

Not in the least bit scruffy is this splendid quartet of smaller birds that are all showing well on this stretch of the Costa Blanca at the moment ...






Southern Grey Shrike, El Pinet (04/02/2015)

Bluethroat, Segura River (09/02/2015)

Dartford Warbler, El Pinet (10/02/2015)
timbobagginsabroad, roadtrip, spain, 2015
Black Necked Grebe beginning to emerge from Winter plumage, El Pinet (06/02/2015)

Its been a bit of a strange 10 days or so down here but also strangely relaxing. The weather for one has been literally blowing hot & cold, with alternate blustery cold winds one day and then calm and sunny the next. I've found a bit of a spot alongside the Santa Pola salt pans and apart from brief excursions to some of the nearby hotspots I haven't done a lot and in many ways just realized that I'm on holiday and don't need to do much!

Strange to see so many other motorhomes .. Brits, Dutch, Germans all parked together 'bonnet to bumper' in the usual convenient but unattractive places.


With a bit of effort (going the extra mile?), your very own spot and a view similar to mine not difficult!
(both images lifted from Google Earth panoramio.
Santa Pola saltpans and my base for 10 days or so.
Not strange but a thorough waste of time .. I stupidly left my wallet on a counter top in a shop in Alicante but actually thought I'd lost it or had it pinched. The whole business of stopping one card, a phone call to VISA to arrange some emergency cash and a tedious conversation with an automaton I was never entirely sure was human was ameliorated somewhat by an email from Yorkshire Wildlife Trust to say that the shop owner had found said wallet in the shop (they'd found my YWT email address in the wallet.. good thinking guys!). I'd lost the will to live after stopping 1 card with VISA so thankfully I was able to access funds from another account and just transfer money. Just as well too .. got a call a full 4 days later to say that my emergency cash had been authorised. On my own in a foreign country with 4 euros in my pocket, begging for food / money could have been a reality! Cheers VISA ... bet you're not so keen for me to complete that customer satisfaction survey now are you!! Count to 3, breathe and ..... relax ....and let it go .....YOU USELESS VISA BOTS!!!

Strangely relaxing waiting around for the early Spring migrants to start returning ( there's already been a trickle of Yellow Wags and Sand Martins) and just taking it all in. Here's a few more from my ramblings along saltpan alleys, reed beds and dirt tracks ...


timbobagginsabroad, spain, 2015
Slender Billed Gull, El Pinet (10/02/2015)
Slender Billed Gulls, one of 10 or so at El Pinet, now developing that glorious rosy tinge on their breeding plumage.

Slender Billed Gull, El Pinet (10/02/2015)
Prickly Pear bearing fruit and other emerging plant / wild flowers, some of which I've managed to identify some not (I'm on holiday!)

Prickly Pear, Pego (02/02/2015)


Mediterranean Storksbill, El Pinet (13/02/2015)
Mediterranean Ragged Robin?

Bermuda Buttercup ... an invasive but attractive & its everywhere!
Onion Weed ... another escapee from Western European gardens

Sweetpea sp?

 


Osprey with a fish, Santa Pola saltpans (06/02/2015)
One of a pair of Ospreys that were hunting over the Santa Pola Saltpans... distant shots the both but you can clearly see this one has been successful!

Osprey with a fish, Santa Pola saltpans (06/02/2015)
White Headed Duck still in eclipse plumage, El Fondo (04/02/2015)

This was first White Headed Duck I'd seen in Spain for nigh on 25 yrs!

They are in fact fairly numerous at El Fondo but the Spanish population is down to about 2,500 individuals with habitat loss, shooting and the hybridisation with the non native North American Ruddy Duck the main causes for decline.








Across the road on the Santa Pola side I estimated about 1300 Greater Flamingoes stretching out into the distance like a pinky white wave of confetti across the salt pans. On my side of the road there were never more than 30 or so but they were very entertaining at times ....
 
Greater Flamingo agro, El Pinet (13/02/2015)

Greater Flamingo agro, El Pinet (13/02/2015)

Greater Flamingo agro, El Pinet (13/02/2015)
 
So yesterday morning (14th Feb) things came full circle with another trip out to El Fondo for the weekly 1/2 day opening of the best parts of the reserve. I can't believe and don't understand the restrictive public access to this wonderful place (with some help and advice from the Wildlife Trusts or the RSPB, Comunidad Valenciana could make a killing and secure much needed funds to preserve the wildlife of this under threat environment!) ... anyway, less of the political (I'm on holiday!) Greater Spotted Eagle spotted again but the pics turned out to be rubbish, 3 House Martins, 1 Red Rumped Swallow and 1 Barn Swallow this morning at El Pinet are all good early returning migrants and although not a migrant and sadly no pic (they're a bugger!), my first ever Richard's Pipit flushed from my little patch at El Pinet .... been a bogey bird for me for years that one!!
 

Graham Critchell, Spain birding guide.
It was good to meet up again with Graham and Gordon and may I take this opportunity to thank both for their tips and tricks for birding around this bit of the Costa Blanca. Graham Critchell is probably no stranger to birders in the area but to anyone wishing to experience bird watching of the highest quality with an experienced guide here he is.....Graham Critchell
Other birds around here not mentioned above include a roving flock of Stone Curlew and a very average ney disappointing pic! Greenshank (2), Redshank (2), Avocet (c450 on te Santa Pola side), Kentish & Ringed Plover, Sanderling, Dunlin, Little Stint, Black Tailed Godwits (c150 Santa Pola), Black Winged Stilt, Curlew (not many) Whimbrel (1), Common & Green Sandpiper, Shelduck (100s), a pair of distant Bonellis Eagles, Meadow Pipits (c60), Stonechat, Audouin's Gull (single numbers) and a resident and very noisy Little Owl!
 
Stone Curlew flying past, El Pinet (13/02/2015)
Avocet, El Pinet (06/02/2015)


timbobagginsabroad, spain, road trip, 2015
That's one fit Shelduck!, El Pinet (13/02/2015)

Ok that's me for another week, I've already moved on ... currently in some cracking Steppe lands around Petrola and already have Great Bustards in the bag ... next post ok!