Wednesday, November 08, 2006

Kosi Bay & Sodwana

New bird sightings (view our complete list at www.thinusbotha.co.za/birdlist):
Since March this year we were so exited going on this trip. This was the first time we visited SA's coastal shores since we started birding and we expected lots of new sightings.

Day 1 - Kosi Bay Nature Reserve
Arriving at the reserve we were directed to the first overnight huts. Our first impression was very good. It was already late by then so we didn't see any new birds.

Day 2 - Kosi Mouth
At the reception waiting for our permits for Kosi Mouth, we got our first new sightings: the Purple-banded sunbird and the Yellow-throated longclaw. At Kosi Mouth we snorkeled the entire day seeing the most beautiful ocean fish... angle fish, domino fish, moray eels and a beautiful lion fish. Returning from the mouth we saw our first White-fronted Plover.
Day 3 - Dog Point
After unpacking at Maputaland Bush Camp, we went to relax at Dog Point the afternoon. We saw White-fronted plovers again together with the Ruddy Turnstone. These four photos are some we managed to get.

While we were relaxing on the sand and snorkeling we noted some kind of vulture or eagle souring. At first we were confused, because this bird looked very much like a Fish Eagle, but had a funny looking beak. To our great pleasure we found (after a while of searching and examining our rather bad quality photos) that it was indeed the special Palm-nut Vulture. After returning to our bush camp, we asked Willie what was his opinion and if he had seen Palm-nut Vultures at Dog's Point...and yes, he said, there were indeed two Palm-nut Vultures nesting at Dog's Point. The reason that we concluded that this was a Palm-nut Vulture, was because of the looks of it's beak, the mainly white primary wing feathers and white tips at the edge of its wings (seen in the second picture). We were very fortunate to see this amazing bird.

Day 4 - The fern/palm forest
We went to a beautiful forest the next day. This was in the same vicinity where one of the camps were from the hiking trail. In this forest we spotted two new birds... a Lizard Buzzard and a Black-crowned Tchagra... and wait for this... we even took a photo of both!
Day 5 - Black Rock
We got up early the next morning and while drinking coffee outside we saw our first Sombre Greenbul.
Later Willie took us to see the waterhole 2 km from the house where a couple of hippo's live. In the field we saw several African Wattled Lapwing and lots of LBJ's that flew around like little superbirds not giving a near glimpse for us. While one of us
were wandering into the field, a Swamp (Natal) Nightjar flew up from the fright it got and flew off making this weird sound... just like a water drop. It made one large turn and settled down in the grass again. Well, everything happened so quickly that we were able to ID the nightjar only by it's sound it made while it flew away. At the hippo whole a African Jacana were present... yes Thinus were especially delighted on our first sighting of a Jacana.
After packing we went to Black Rock to spend the day. On our way there, we came across a pair of Little Bea-eaters that were attacking the Land Rover probably because their nest were nearby. This was so far the most pretty little bird I have seen on the trip... they were so determined to chase us away...

After spending the afternoon at Black Rock, we headed to Sodwana where we had a reservation at the Sodwana Bay Nature Reserve from the Thursday to Sunday. On our way to Sodwana we had 2 sightings of Crowned Hornbill.
In Sodwana we saw many birds we spotted previously, especially the Southern Boubou, Pied Wagtail and Cape Wagtail.
Over this 3 and a half days we were extra lazy... lying around on the beach, snorkeling again, playing 30 seconds and UNO and just walking in the nature reserve.
The new sightings were as follow:
In Sodwana Bay Nature Reserve -
  • Yellow Weaver (no camara with us at the time)
  • Purple Crested Turaco (very beautiful, but it was to quick to take a photo)
  • Dark-backed Weaver (in afrikaans a "bosmusikant". I loved the beautiful sound this bird entertained us with - see photo next)
  • Square-tailed Drongo
  • Collard Sunbird (we saw 2 sunbirds nesting... very cute with their short beaks)
  • Rudd's Apalis (this was rather a mission to find the bird making this sound... finally when we found it, it was this tiny little apalis with it's big mouth... hmm ok, beak)
  • Temminck's Courser (they say this is a special bird we saw... check out these photo's)
  • Broad-billed Roller (I kept this one for the last of on our list of new sightings because for me, this is a very eye catching bird... colors galore!!)
Some of the other interesting photos we took from birds we already had on our birdlist, but still is special... in one way or another:
  • The Grey-headed Gull (we saw this gull at Bronkhorstspruit dam as well... these birds are just everywhere - seen at Kosi Mouth)




  • Pied Wagtail... without a tail (this poor thing ran around on the Sodwana beach with it's partner and initially confused us, but very soon we realized the wagtail must have had an accident of some sort)

  • Brown-Hooded Kingfisher (just because it's a great photo and who sees a kingfisher everyday? - seen near Maputaland Bush Camp)

  • A collage of the common bird seen in Sodwana and Kosi Bay:
Top Left: The White-throated Robin-Chat
Top Right: Crested Guineafowl
Bottom Left: Black-backed Puffback
Bottom Right: Southern Boubou

Our full list (old and new birds for this trip was)
  1. Common Fiscal
  2. African Sacret Ibis
  3. Egyptian Goose
  4. Long-tailed Widowbird
  5. Black-bellied Starling
  6. Cape Turtle-Dove
  7. Crowned Lapwing
  8. Cattle Egret
  9. Blacksmith Lapwing
  10. Black-shouldered Kite
  11. Pied Crow
  12. Yellow-throated Longclaw
  13. Fork-tailed Drongo
  14. Red-winged Starling
  15. Purple-banded Sunbird
  16. Bronze Mannikin
  17. Lesser Swamp-Warbler
  18. Brown-hooded Kingfisher
  19. White-throated Robin-Chat
  20. Palm-nut Vulture
  21. Little Bea-eater
  22. Ruddy Turnstone
  23. White-fronted Plover
  24. Lizard Buzzard
  25. Black-crowned Tchagra
  26. Sombre Greenbul
  27. African Wattled Lapwing
  28. Spur-winged Goose
  29. Black-backed Puffback
  30. African Jacana
  31. Crowned Hornbill
  32. Swamp Nightjar
  33. Crested Guineafowl
  34. Laughing Dove
  35. Natal Francolin
  36. Hadeda Ibis
  37. African Hoopoe
  38. African Pied Wagtail
  39. Cape Sparrow
  40. Speckled Mousebird
  41. Dark-capped Bulbul
  42. White-breasted Cormorant
  43. Rudd's Apalis
  44. Collared Sunbird
  45. Square-tailed Drongo
  46. Dark-backed Weaver
  47. Purple-crested Turaco
  48. Southern Boubou
  49. Temminck's Courser
  50. Burchell's Coucal
  51. Yellow Weaver
  52. Broad-billed Roller

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

WoW!
beautiful pictures!

take care
AJ

Anonymous said...

Hi Luzelle

Great blog, well written and some excellent photo’s! Temminck's Courser is a real “special” (great photo too!), as is broad-billed roller. There are many birders on the net that will be envious of those sightings!

Keep the trip reports coming…

Kind Regards

Andrew

Anonymous said...

Hi Luzelle!

Ek sien jou lysie groei mooi, en julle het nogal ‘n paar “specials” ook daarop! Baie nice.

Roelf Nel
Middelburg

Anonymous said...

Hi Luzelle

I really enjoyed your writeup on your blogsite, and your photos are great! Just one miss-ID I picked up - your Southern Tchagra is actually a Black-crowned Tchagra, but tchagras are all pretty similar, so don't feel too bad! Zululand is great for birds - my family live near False Bay (Lake St Lucia) so I get to bird in the area every month or so. If you're ever coming down to KZN again and you're hoping to see particular birds, let me know and I'll give you advice if I can.

Cheers
James

Anonymous said...

Well, for beginners you did really well! I live in Durban, so we regularly go up into Zululand – Mkuze, Hluhluwe, Bonamanzi, Fanies Island etc, certainly a great area to explore for wildlife! The birding in the Durban area is also fantastic, although I am currently working 4 days a week in Pretoria, which is not quite the same as Durban, but am at least still getting some new birds!

You are lucky, you still have so many new wonderful birds to look forward to, enjoyJ

Anonymous said...

Hallo Luzelle

Welcome to the world of birding and birders. It is an adventure par excellance!!. What a brilliant trip you had to the east coast. My wife and I worked at a lodge 40km’s south of Kosi Bay for a month and didn\t see many of the specials you did. Maybe we worked to much.

Things we didn’t see was Swamp Nightjar, Yellow Weaver, Temmick’s Courser (Special birds indeed!) and Broad-billed Roller. Some of the other things like Rudd’s Apalis and Sqaure-tailed Drongo’s are also no mean feat for a list of around 200. I can well remember when I hit a list of 200. What a brilliant and sad day. To think of it that some people see 300 on a Big Birding Day and a lifelist can be 200! Depressing really but a great challenge in itself. One of the most exciting things to me is to build my list, plan trips, seek out species I haven’t seen before. For example the four species I mentioned first I still haven’t seen and my list is now up to 611.

Another great aspect of birding is the people you meet. I attach the report I wrote on reaching 600. You’ll see that people is what makes it speciel. Sharing moments and trips, doing long twitches and seeing rare things. A hint: Never let a real rare sighting go by without doing your best to get there. For example the Asiatic Dowitcher of two years ago, the Elegant Tern of a year ago etc. These species shows up once in a life time and if you are interested in birds, make the effort. I didn’t when I was on 200 and missed out on Sheathbill and Western Reef Heron. SABN is a great place to get to know of these special vagrants and there is always somebody leaving from Joh’burg. I am based close to Rustenburg so I drive through Joh’burg on twitches. Another example is the Irania (Persina Robin) twitch – 3000 km round trip and everybody dipped by 12 hours.

Myself and three people are heading to Namibia to twitch the Shelley’s Sunbird at Kalizo on BBD. Becoming part of the birding community opens up ventures like this.

Books that you need to buy: Roberts version 7 – the big expensive blue one; it is a must for every birdwatcher, - The Birdfinder: a guide to watching birds in Southern Africa. You can see if you can find these books on www.netbooks.co.za.

Every trip you do you should try and see at least 5 – 15 new species. It is quite possible. A day trip to Pilanesberg National Park should see you with a list of 100-150 for the day with a number of lifers. A week trip to Kruger NP can yield you 200 species in total and around 40-50 lifers. I got hooked on a trip to Golden Gate NP with a good friend and my wife, Emsè, and I picked up 89 lifers in 3 days.

You state that Southern Africa has 958 birds. The unofficial “official” number is 961. Added to the list is Dowitcher, Elegant Tern and Irania. The latter you’ll find in the green field guide – Birds South of the Sahara. The other two you will have to search on the web. Dowitcher was seen November 2004 and Elegant Tern earlier this year around February.

You are also welcome to look at my (old) site www.obenbosch.com. I am re-writing the sight but it is taking a long time.

You and Thinus are welcome to come and visit us or come on bird trips. I am always looking for peole to share birding experiences. We are currently the general managers at Thaba Phuti Safari Lodge (www.thabaphuti.com) .

Nice to meet you

Kind regards

Hanno Langenhoven

Ps. Are you Afrikaans or English? I am the former.

Unfortunately I don’t have the 600 report anymore, my computer broke and I see I haven’t made a back-up. Somebody on the web might still have. If you want to read it, just ask the net.