Following an overnight flight via Kuala Lumpur we eventually
arrived in Kota Kinabalu around 11.15am, minus some of our luggage. We met our
excellent guide Lee Kok Chung and drove the short distance into downtown Kota
Kinabalu where we checked in to our rooms, had some lunch and then drove out to
a coastal site just 30 minutes away from the hotel. The tide was just receding
and there were a few shorebirds present. Within a couple of minutes we were
scoping a female Malaysian Plover, a
much wanted bird for some of the group. And what a nice way to kick-start the
tour. More and more shorebirds began arriving and we enjoyed decent scope views
of both Greater and Lesser Sandplovers, Kentish Plovers, Pacific Golden Plover, Grey
Plover, at least 6 delightful Terek
Sandpipers and a pair of Ruddy
Turnstones. I was surprised to hear a Yellow-bellied
Prinia singing and it eventually showed reasonably well, alongside a Yellow-vented Bulbul. A Blue-throated Bee-eater also appeared
nearby and a Striated Heron flew
close by.
From here we drove to an area of wasteland with large trees and
bumped the list up even more with Green
Imperial-Pigeon, Pink-necked
Green-Pigeon and a pair of lovely Blue-naped
Parrots.
Blue-naped Parrots |
This latter species was something of a surprise and it turns out
that there is a self-sustaining feral population around the town, just like the
3 Java Sparrows we also encountered
here. Again, another big surprise.
This area was also good for White-breasted Woodswallow, Sunda Pygmy Woodpecker, Zebra Dove, Chestnut Munia, Pied Triller,
Pacific Swallow, Brown-throated and Olive-backed Sunbirds, Malaysian
Pied Fantail, Asian Glossy Starling
and even our first endemic – Dusky Munia.
So, as I said earlier, we saw mainly a bunch of list padders but it was enjoyable to get out and put binoculars on some birds after the long flight from Europe. We returned to the hotel by 5pm and met up with Martin, our final group member, who had just flown in from Germany.
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