Showing posts with label Rancho Naturalista. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rancho Naturalista. Show all posts

26 October 2017

Costa Rica Bird Challenge: Day 4, (15 Oct 2017)

Rancho Naturalista to Crested Owl; a day for the ages…
 
I have to admit having earmarked this day for something pretty special before arriving in Costa Rica, and I approached it with a little extra excitement to some of the others, no offence to the other excellent sites meant. However, “Rancho” is a bit of a birding legend. The lodge is run by a birder, the supreme host of Lisa Erb, and has a team of excellent bird guides right on site. I knew one of them from my brief time here last February, and was quick to secure the services of Harry Barnard for this day. His hearing skills, spotting skills and guiding skills are superb. I can honestly say I have not experienced such accurate descriptions of where a bird is hidden within a mass of tropical leaves better from anyone else. He carried no laser pointer, and did not require one either!
 
The first few hours of the day were spent birding the grounds close to the lodge, and with the considerable aid of Harry, we had chalked up 120 species or so in a few hours before we left there, including some special ones indeed: Tawny-chested Flycatcher, Snowcap, Black-crested Coquette, a lonely Green Thorntail, White-necked JacobinViolet-headed Hummingbird, several Green-breasted Mangos, great looks at a tubby Tawny-throated Leaftosser (a bird that simply oozes character in spite of being largely brown in colour); Golden-olive Woodpecker, Scarlet-thighed Dacnis, and Carmiol’s Tanager. Dull-mantled Antnbirds were also heard calling from deep down below calling from a wet gully, while the taunting calls of the always difficult to see Thicket Antpitta echoed down to us from the slopes above. A landmark moment also came when we finally nailed down our first House Wren of the challenge (quite belatedly for such a common species!)
 
After reluctantly leaving Rancho Naturalista behind, (but fortunately not Harry who lent his ears and eyes to us for the entire day), we set off for the Tuis Valley, with two particular targets in mind, a Sunbittern hiding among the boulders of the river, and the rare Lanceolated Monklet in the riverside forest, a very tough bird in this country. The first bird proved straightforward; in spite of the forest seeming deathly quiet, a Sunbittern showed, and due to the tenacity of a fellow team in the same area, the Redstart Wranglers, we all got to enjoy long, long looks at the cute Lanceolated Monklet too, before we all left for El Copal, another area of excellent foothill forest not far from Rancho.
 
After narrowly making it up the dirt road to El Copal, we quickly ate and launched off into the forest, knowing that our few hours on site might feel like barely enough, even in the potentially worst part of the day in the tropics – early afternoon. However, this trail and this reserve bucked that trend, and we enjoyed a near constant stream of birds, and ended up virtually having to run back to the bus to fit in one more site before dark. Flocks were quite active, and we got lots of Black-and-yellow and Emerald Tanagers (no exaggeration), got see well males of both White-ruffed and White-crowned Manakins, got looks at both Song Wren and Bicolored Antbird (but could not set eyes on the calling Spotted Antbirds in the same area unfortunately due to severe time constraints leading us away), Tawny-capped and White-vented Euphonias, a glowing male White-winged Tanager, Red-headed Barbet, and the rare Rufous-browed Tyrannulet were all also seen. Black-breasted Wood-Quails however, approached very close and nearly deafened us with their raucous calls, but never broke cover.
The reason we ended up rushing around the trail quicker that we’d have liked to, was not because we had far to go, or that the birding was bad, quite the contrary; but because the hotel we were heading for Casa Truire is home to a large wetland, which could provide some serious list loading of waterbirds that we may not have time for elsewhere on the bird race. We simply had to make it there with light to spare. We made it there in the nick of time, avoided checking in to give us the time needed, and jogged down to the lake edge. Several Prothonotary Warblers in the trees beside the dock were a nice start, as were wild Muscovy Ducks, Snail Kites, the call of our first White-throated Crake, and news from another group of a Limpkin around the corner, which was soon located along with Least Grebe, and better still Least Bittern. One of the last birds of daylight was a Russet-naped Wood-Rail strutting across the lakeside trail, and several Pauraques lifting off the forest path. However, the day was not over. Following a rather extravagant dinner, we set out for nightbirds, and very quickly were being glared at by an unhappy looking Tropical Screech-Owl. We then ran into the leading team (led by local guide Diego Quesada), who very kindly showed us a Crested Owl (adult and juvenile) they had just found, to round off what was anticipated to be one of the better days of the tour, and surpassed expectations, with just under 200 species recorded for our team on this day.
 
The next day was to be very different indeed, with a visit to the endemic rich highlands to start, and ending on the other, Pacific, side of the mountains. Just outside Carara National Park

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25 October 2017

Costa Rica Bird Challenge: Day 3, (14 Oct 2017)

Raptors Galore, and Owl provides opening gambit at Rancho…
Today, we continued the challenge by staying within the Caribbean lowlands and foothills. Initially, we walked around the property of Selva Bananito Lodge, with a 4am start for night birds. Unfortunately, all this produced was the same Great Potoo we had crossed two rivers for, and sweated for the night before, now propping itself just above the lodge, and calling regularly ensuring every team had it by breakfast! A calling Central American Pygmy-Owl, a curiously difficult bird throughout it wide range, was what we were really hoping for, and, in spite of the bird tooting away above us at close range, we simply could not see it in the half light of dawn. Still, a heard counted, and it made it on to the challenge list. The brevity of the walk around the property, unsurprisingly provided little new (as we did not have timer to reach the richer primary forest), aside from a White-winged Becard, and the tragic news that another team had photographed a lifebird for me in a tree we had staked out for it too to add to the anguish: Red-fronted Parrotlet, for which this must be one of the best sites in the country.
Next stop was Kekoldi Hawk Watch, which was superb. From the tower, we observed thousands of raptors making their way south for thee, mostly Broad-winged Hawks, but also Mississippi Kites, Merlins, Peregrines, a single Red-tailed Hawk, a handful of Swainson’s Hawks too, and even a few late moving Swallow-tailed Kites, one of the most elegant of all the American raptors. We also got Yellow-billed Cuckoo, and several migrant warblers from there too, while standing above the level of the surrounding rainforest. 

We headed down from the tower, snaking our way down through the rainforest and cocoa plantations as we did so, picking up an absurdly tame Double-toothed Kite, a boisterous group of Purple-throated Fruicrows, White-whiskered Puffbird, Checker-throated Antwren, and Black-striped Woodcreeper. The next stop was a treat, and involved no birds whatsoever, as we were treated to a lunch in Puerto Viejo, with a Kalypso band playing excellent Caribbean music all the while.

 
Following this, we skirted the coast, seeing more shorebirds, like Greater Yellowlegs, Black-bellied and Wilson’s Plovers, and also found a small number of Brown Noddy feeding close inshore, normally a scarce bird along the Caribbean coast. On the way to our next venue, the highly touted Rancho Naturalista, we spotted a Grey-lined Hawk, a species that has only recently been recorded in this area. 

Our arrival at Rancho was greeted with cocktails, but also a Mottled Owl, which brought dinner to a sudden halt as it posed right beside the lodge, and a late nightwalk led our team to hear a Common Potoo several times, before we retired to bed with fresh images of raptors moving in vast kettles over the rainforest in our minds…
The revered Rancho Naturalista was to provide the avian entertainment for the next day; I could not wait!

#ict #birdwatchingrepublic #ranchonaturalista