Archive by Author | flquist

Photo album has been updated with photos from Simon Cavaillès

Image

Simon Cavaillè has sent us a bunch of high-quality photos and the following species have been updated with new photos: Black Kite, Black-headed Lapwing, Spur-winged Lapwing, Whimbrel, Kittlitz’s Plover, Grey-headed Gull, Slender-billed Gull, Namaqua Dove, Abyssinian Roller, Pied Kingfisher, Little Bee-eater, Greater Blue-eared Glossy Starling, Red-cheeked Cordon-bleu. Most importantly the following new species have been added to the album: Swallow-tailed Kite, Temminck’s Courser, Diederik Cuckoo, White-faced Scops Owl, Marsh Owl & Long-tailed Nightjar.  

 

Reference photo album updated

Marsh Sandpiper

The following new species have been added to the reference photo album: Audouin’s GullKittlitz’s Plover, Marsh Sandpiper, Pied Avocet, Southern Grey Shrike, Subalpine Warbler & Woodchat Shrike.

New photos have been added to the album with regards to the following species: Black Crake, Black Kite, Black-tailed Godwit, Caspian Tern, Common Sandpiper, Crested Lark, Great Cormorant, Grey-headed Kingfisher, Hooded Vulture, Little Bee-eater, Little Grebe, Northern Weater, Peregrin Falcon, Pied Kingfisher, Red-billed Firefinch, Ruff, Shoveler, White-faced Whisteling-duck, Wood Sandpiper & Yellow Wagtail.

Pay a visit to the album and enjoy the photos.

Peregrine Falcon on Hotel Ngor Diarama.

A Peregrine Falcon, the world’s fastest bird of prey, has for years spent the winter months on Hotel Ngor Diarama. Peregrines normally breed on and hunt from cliff faces and the architecture of Hotel Ngor Diarama obviously resembles a cliff face. I have been looking for the Peregrine for the last couple of months and now (s)he has finally returned. (S)he makes dashing flights from the hotel around the Ngor area on long broad-based pointed wings, like elegant triangles. I can only recommend everyone to pass by Hotel Ngor Diarama and enjoy the flight of this fantastic bird.

Flemming.

Peregrine Falcon (Falco peregrinus)

An unlucky bee

Technopole today - Little Bee-eater (Merops Pusillus) with a very unlucky bee

Yellow Wagtails at Technopole.

Sunday 06.11.2011, I went to Technopole. I was hoping to find that European Spoonbills, Godwits and Whimbrels had arrived from Europe – and preferably ringed, so I could report back. I didn’t encounter any of those.  On top of all the usual suspects; 7 – 8 species of herons/egrets, the two species of comorants, Little Grebe, Osprey, Black Kite, Pied Crown, Pied Kingfisher, White-faced Whistling Ducks, Pied Kingfisher, Black-winged Stilts, Common Sandpipers and Wood Sandpipers, some gulls and terns I found a handful of Showelers enjoying the calmness of the lake.

However, the morning ended up as a hunt for warblers and different subspecies of Yellow Wagtails of different sub-species, and they were numerous.

Yellow Wagtail (Motacilla flava flavissima) an arrival from the British Isles.

Yellow Wagtail (Motacilla flava flava) - an arrival from Western Europe and Scandinavia

Northern Wheatear (Oenanthe oenanthe) - also a European visitor

Subalpine Warbler (Sylvia cantillans) - an arrival from Southern Europe (Spain, Italy, Greece)

Flemming.

Lac Tanma, Lac Mbaouane and Kayar

Sunday 30.10.2011 a group of us embarked on a day’s excursion to wetlands north of Dakar. Lac Tanma is one of the best sites for waterbirds near Dakar and, after Lac Retba (or Rose), it is the largest of the lakes of the Niayes Important Bird Area, comprising a number  of lakes  between Dakar and Fas Boye, along 80km of coast. It is a 1.5 to 2  hour drive from Dakar. One takes the N1 out of Dakar. At the N1/N2 junction take the N2 towards Thies. 10Km after the junction is a turning to the left, onto a laterite road, sign-posted to Bayakh and Kayar. At Bayakh (c8km), take a right turn at the  main bus/taxi parking. If you want to check, ask for the road  to Mboro. A further c12km reaches the lake, though it will only be visible most of the year from the  road as dry mud. You can now  walk on foot along the southern edge to the right of the road for 2-3km to the water or, turning right off the  road just  before the  lake onto one of several pistes, follow  the dry lake edge. Vehicle or cart tracks guide you. How far you can drive depends on the time of year and  amount of rains. You should be  able to drive to the open water, but some care is needed!

Greater Flamingo - mostly grey juveniles

The direction of light can make  birding difficult, with the sun in front of you. It is best to arrive as early (or late?) as possible and  wander east along the lake edge, looking back at  the  birds. I cannot find much published data for the lake. It is included in the annual January waterbird counts and the Important Bird Area citation mentions its use by a few thousand greater flamingo.

Greater Flamingo

Regular observations would no doubt be interesting and produce rarities. Compared to Lac Retba, with its tourists and salt industry, this is a quiet lake with a few cattle herders and a beautiful setting in a basin surrounded by large, old baobabs.

We made no attempt to count birds or check everything, so numbers are very approximate. The first identifiable waterbirds were greater flamingos, with a few hundred, mostly grey juveniles. A few hundred ducks were mainly garganey, with some shoveler. Probably a few  thousand waders provided a pleasant mix of species; mainly ringed plover, kentish plover, kittlitz plover, ruff, black-winged stilt, curlew sandpiper, wood sandpiper, avocet, dunlin and little stint.  A couple of hundred terns and gulls were mostly gull-billed tern and slender-billed gull, with a  few foraging black and white-winged black terns together.  A single black stork  was the most interesting of the larger waterbirds.  A few marsh and montagu’s harriers hunted the lake edges  and ospreys were overhead.

Sanderling at Kayar

We next turned round and drove, via Barakh, to the busy fishing town of Kayar for lunch. On entering the town, if you keep driving along the main road parallel to the beach, just north of  the town is  a small campement with some shade. From here you see the start of  the Côte Sauvage; some 120km of uniform habitat with narrow, wind-swept sandy beaches, backed by dunes planted with the introduced Asian/Australian tree Casuarina equisetifolia. It is possible  to  drive along the beach with a 4×4. If the small section at Kayar is typical, the  whole length is likely important for its numbers of sanderling and Sandwich tern, whilst other typical species of sandy beaches along the sea’s edge were ruddy turnstone, whimbrel, grey plover and oystercatcher. Two Audouin’s gulls, both birds in their second year, were early returning birds. At Tanji Bird Reserve in the Gambia Clive Barlow reported his  first returning birds today also.

The road from Kayar back ot Bayakh passes through the village of Mbaouane after 5km and there is  a large lake here, visible from the road, on the left -hand (eastern) side. You can access it by walking down through cultivated fields. There were many more waders here and a few ospreys, but we took only a brief look in the increasing heat and saw no new species before the return drive to Dakar.

Text; Paul & photos; Flemming.