Leaving at 5am from our hotel we drive a short
distance to a lovely patch of forest from where the unbelievable happens, and a
huge Pere David’s Owl flies over us
and lands on the top of a nearby conifer. We watch this beauty for some 20
minutes as it flies all around us and it even at one point passes low over our
heads, circling us before alighting nearby – stunning views indeed. Needless to
say we were all elated at this sighting and what a way to wrap up the tour. The
rest of the forest was pretty quiet and we could only find some commoner
species, so return to our hotel for a quick shower and to pack before setting off
on the long drive to Chengdu and the end of a fabulous tour.
Sunday, 19 July 2015
Thursday, 16 July 2015
Baxi Forest
So a nice relaxing 6am departure for Baxi Forest
and it’s a lovely clear morning and we can actually see the sun as we drive
along. We walk into the moss-encrusted pine forest hoping for really only two
birds that we still need (Three-banded Rosefinch
and Chinese Nuthatch) but neither
are present, although on an other day the birds we see would constitute a good
walk: Chinese Leaf-Warbler, Przevalski’s Nuthatch, Sichuan Tit, Red Crossbill, Chinese
White-browed Rosefinch and others. We do get a Long-tailed Thrush teed up in the scopes as it sings right from the
top of a tall conifer – very nice indeed.
Breakfast is a jovial affair before walking up a
beautiful valley with scrub and bushes on both sides where a Sharpe’s Rosefinch had been recently
seen. There are a couple fine male White-browed
Tit-Warblers, Chinese Fulvetta, Plain Laughingthrush, many Yellow-streaked Warblers, Greenish Warbler, Kessler’s Thrush, Rufous-breasted
Accentor, plenty of Common
Rosefinches, and best of all a very unexpected Spectacled Parrotbill that comes in very close. Wow! And further up
the valley a flock of 14 Tibetan Siskins
are feeding in a bush at eye level – again another species giving crippling
views and we watch them for ages until they fly off.
Higher up the valley we find many Chinese Beautiful Rosefinches and
there’s a nesting pair of White-browed
Tits here as well. But all too soon it’s time to leave the Tibetan Plateau
and we head towards our next hotel, getting close Daurian Jackdaws by the roadside before stopping at my usual site
to scope a superb male Siberian
Rubythroat singing from on top of a bush for several minutes. We arrive at
the hotel at 4.45pm and have plenty of time to relax this evening.
Wednesday, 15 July 2015
The Tibetan Plateau
Leaving at 5.30am we drive across the plateau and
drop down into Baxi Forest, staking out our usual spot for Blue Eared-Pheasant. We wait at an overlook in the cold morning air
but there’s no sign of the pheasants, but luckily Jay spots a very distant bird
feeding on a hillside way in the distance. All of a sudden Derek spots a Chinese Grouse that has been calling for
a while below us and everyone enjoys the most incredible scope views of a male
bird for at least 10 minutes before it walks off. Wow! As if that isn’t enough
a pair of Snowy-cheeked (Sukatschev’s)
Laughingthrushes come in very close to check us out and are also on view
for maybe 10 minutes, with one bird in particular coming to about 5 metres away
and calling from a bare bush……. Mmmmm… Oh and a pair of Chinese Serow are scoped on the hillside opposite us to kick start
a particularly good day for mammals.
After yet another picnic breakfast we drive lower
and walk along the forest edge ( I must admit I picked the wrong spot to start
walking and was about a kilometre uphill from where I usually begin walking)
and this turns out to be a little bit of divine inspiration as a pair of the
extremely rare Sika Deer are scoped
on the hillside above. Then a flock of Red
Crossbills fly into the treetops including some lovely bright males and as
we scope them a Sichuan Jay appears
on the top of the conifer immediately behind them. Further inside the forest
and a Chinese Song Thrush puts in an
appearance, and we watch a Przewalski’s
Nuthatch taking food into its very large nest hole. We also enjoy fine
views of both Chestnut and Kessler’s Thrushes, Plain and Elliot’s Laughingthrushes, Yellow-streaked
Warbler, Slaty-backed Flycatcher,
Sichuan Tit, and others before
driving back up towards the plateau. On the way we get real lucky with a
cracking Blue Eared-Pheasant spotted
feeding in an open area below the road. Higher up there’s yet another White-browed Tit, Hodgson’s Redstart and a Eurasian
Hoopoe.
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| Possibly the worst photo i've ever posted on the blog - but its a phone scoped Chinese Grouse |
Following lunch at a restaurant in Ruoergai we
drive towards Flower Lake, and Ron spots a snowfinch which prompts a hasty exit
and we find many White-rumped
Snowfinches. After watching them running around the Plateau Pika colony, our first Rufous-necked
Snowfinch is found nearby. Despite a light drizzle we thoroughly enjoy
watching them, and then things get even better as we scope a distant Saker feeding on some recently caught
prey.
Once at Flower Lake we take the shuttle bus down to
the lake and follow the boardwalk which takes us to a series of viewing
platforms. I am very pleasantly surprised to see many superb White-winged Terns and a few Whiskered Terns flying over the
marshes. Other goodies are at least 3 Great
Bitterns seen flying over the tall grasses at the water’s edge and even walking
out in the open, a lone Eurasian
Spoonbill, Eastern Marsh Harrier,
Red-crested Pochard and many Ferruginous Ducks.
![]() |
| Excellent habitat at Flower Lake |
For me, the star
bird is Salim Ali’s Swift, with
maybe 100+ flying low over our heads, across the water and literally flying all
around us giving us crippling looks at their scaly undersides. Other birds
present include Greylag Goose, Ruddy Shelduck, Mallard, Northern Shoveller,
Northern Pintail, Eastern Cattle Egret, Great Egret, Himalayan Griffon Vultures, Lesser
Sandplover, Tibetana Common Tern, Horned Larks, Tibetan Larks,
and a few Tibetan Citrine Wagtails.
The drive back to the hotel is enlivened by 2 Tibetan Foxes and our second Eurasian Hobby of the tour perched on
telegraph wires.
Monday, 13 July 2015
Sichuan Continues.....
With rain
battering the windscreen we leave the ‘gorge country’ and head up towards the
Tibetan Plateau and I don’t feel overly optimistic about what today would bring.
With solid, low grey skies it did look like we were in for a foul day and
eating our picnic breakfast in the last shelter before the plateau (a newly
build and as yet not opened fuel station) we saw our first Azure-winged Magpie and Common
Pheasant. Just up the road we drive alongside a grassy area where Oriental Skylarks and Daurian Jackdaw are seen, but by the
time we reach the edge of the plateau the skies are clearing a little and we
venture out to check a bush-covered hillside. A Plain Laughingthrush is noted, along with a Godlewski’s Bunting before continuing our drive. With clearing
skies the scenery changes to a more open vista and high on our agenda is the
plateau endemic White-browed Tit,
although our first few attempts are in vain. Yet there is now some blue sky and
birds are singing and driving along through more open, grassy habitat a hulking
Tibetan Lark flies up from the roadside
and out we jump to find several pairs are present and treat us to super views.
There is also an adult feeding an almost fully grown juvenile nearby, and we’ve
already seen our first Tibetan Citrine
Wagtails, Crested Lark and more…
Moving on and a great find of a Tibetan
Grey Shrike perched on telegraph wires but our viewing is cut short by a
peremptory policeman telling us to move on! But what a great bird!
![]() |
| The Tibetan Plateau |
We have
lunch at a nice little restaurant in Hongyuan that serves delicious dumplings
before continuing our journey. More stops are made before the much-wanted White-browed Tit is found, and we also
see Little Owl, Rock Sparrow, Horned Lark
(or Elwes’s Horned Lark once the promised ‘splits’ are made), Upland Buzzard, lots of Black-eared Kites, Ruddy Shelduck, Ferruginous
Ducks, Northern Raven, Oriental Crow, Pale Martin, Black Redstart,
and plenty of pretty Twite. Special
mention must be made of the Black-necked
Cranes and our first pair are feeding in a flower covered open grassy area
– superb. We also see a couple of nests with one adult tending two huge eggs.
The major
finale of the day is a pair Tibetan
Partridges we scope as they feed on a steep slope opposite us – a scarce
bird in Sichuan and much appreciated. And we finally reach Ruoergai at 7.45pm –
phew what a day!
Friday, 3 July 2015
Mengbishan Clean-Up
Driving
up into the wonderful old pine forest of Mengbishan at 5am I am wondering what
the day will bring – well I shouldn’t have worried. At my usual spot for Koklass Pheasant I cannot remember
getting better views of this sometimes tricky-to-see-well species and in fact
this was probably my best views ever. First of all we saw a male bird fly out
from the forest across the road and into the treeline above us. From here he
called repeatedly for some time before flying back out and onto the slope below
us. Waiting patiently, we watch the road ahead feeling confident that the bird
will have to cross it to get back to his original song-post. Sure enough there
he is, walking sedately across in front of us, hopping up onto the bank and
giving prolonged views right out in the open. Wow! What a way to start the day.
And it gets even better when a Long-tailed
Thrush flies right past us at close range revealing that typical ‘zoothera’ underwing. From here we drive
up above the treeline and check out the Rosefinches, with Common, Chinese Beautiful
and Pink-rumped all present and
feeding on the ground. After a little walk, during which we are surrounded by
inquisitive Yaks, we see several Blood
Pheasants feeding out in the open, when all of a sudden Jay spots the bird
we want – Verreaux’s Monal-Partridge.
In fact there are a pair just feeding between some bushes and there’s plenty of
time to scope them. Following this we are all elated and are treated to further
crippling views of both pheasant and partridge, with a calling monal-partridge
teed up in the scope looking fantastic. This bird really threw his head right
back and called vehemently and to watch this through the scope as he called
from directly upslope to us was a real treat. There’s also some nice views of Alpine Leaf-Warbler and Chinese Fulvetta here as well. As if
this wasn’t enough we came across a pair of White-browed (Severtzov’s) Tit-Warblers bringing food into a small
bush that must have had a nest in it. Initially it was the female feeding on
the ground in front of us before the incredibly beautiful male appears – surely
that combination of suffused pink and blue can’t be right….?
So after
pigging out on breakfast we head down into the forest and begin our hunt for Sichuan Jay. After walking a while, and
I can’t believe I’m saying this, we had a jay teed up in our scopes perched at
the very pinnacle of a pine tree above us. As easy as that, and following
horror stories of other groups dipping here we are very happy indeed. High
five!! But just then the distinctive call of Collared Grosbeak is heard and we scope a superb male and more
demure female as well. We are on a roll and cleaning up our hit-list for this
site, but still no sign of the expected tit-warbler. So we walk some more,
seeing Himalayan Buzzard, Hume’s Warbler, White-throated Redstart and enjoy some fantastic looks at a group
of White Eared Pheasants feeding on
the slope above us - but by now it is late morning. A short drive downhill to
what I have dubbed ‘Magic Corner’ and as soon as we step out of the bus a Yellow-streaked Warbler is seen, but
it’s a shame our attention is diverted momentarily from two other shapes deeper
inside the conifer as it’s a pair of Three-banded
Rosefinch. They promptly fly such a long way over the forest and out of
sight…. Never to be seen again… However, a stunning Przevalski’s Nuthatch gives point-blank views here from about 5
metres away at head height (no camera… Grrrr) for maybe a minute before flying
off. And then just around the corner a pair of the much-wanted Crested Tit-Warblers are feeding in the
closest conifer beside the road and also give stunning views – the male really
is a beauty! Oh and another Long-tailed
Thrush puts in an appearance for Ron, there’s a few White-winged Grosbeaks and a Dark-sided
Flycatcher is also scoped.
To be
honest, that’s our day pretty much done right there and it’s only 1.15pm. We
drive lower for lunch, make a walk and mess around in the Tibetan village with
only Black-eared Kite, Red Turtle and Oriental Turtle Doves, White-throated
Dipper (much to Dexter’s delight), another Chinese Fulvetta and a pair of Daurian
Redstarts to show for our efforts.
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