Saturday, July 22, 2006

Day 1: Eshowe to Dlinza Forest

Saturday, July 22, 2006
4 comments

I awoke in the pre-dawn of July 11, anxious to see some birds. Outside my cabin at the Eshowe B&B (run by birders Hugh and Loueen Chittenden) the birds were already active in the cool morning air. Hadeda ibis flew over, maniacally calling out their names. Bulbuls and barbets chittered and chattered as they flew from tree to tree.

We headed off before breakfast to the Dlinza Forest, where our targets were shy woodland species such as the groundscraper thrush, and spotted ground thrush--two species that resemble our North American thrushes, but feature bolder markings.

On the way to Dlinza, we passed through the town of Eshowe, and right along the road, our lead guide, Christian Boix, shouted "Stop! Hornbills flying over the road!" I had just finished saying that on my 2002 trip to SA I had not seen a single hornbill. In the next 15 minutes we were treated to excellent looks at two species, trumpeter hornbill and southern yellow-billed hornbill.

Southern yellow-billed hornbill in Eshowe.

A young trumpeter hornbill.

Our instructions for the morning's walk were to leave our scopes and luggage in our rooms, since we'd be doing woodland birding on a trail (not good for scopes) and we planned to return to get our luggage later in the day. Kevin McGowan ignored the scope advice. "Hey, it's South Africa and we're supposed to be digiscoping! Can't do it without the scope." I was happy he'd followed his own mind (I''d followed the instructions and was immediately sorry for it). So I spent the morning "poaching" looks and images through Kevin's scope. Thanks Big K!

Throughout the trip, Kevin and I would swap advice (I learned a lot of digiscoping tricks from him), gear, sunscreen, batteries, stories, and rounds of lager. He was a good traveling companion. Oh and he's a pretty smart ornithologist, too--knows his taxonomy like I know all the members of the 1979 World Champion Pittsburgh Pirates. But back to the trip...

At the entrance to Dlinza Forest. I was unsure which category I fit into. Really neither one fits very well.


Our group birding in the Dlinza Forest.

We spent about three hours birding around Dlinza, getting all the goodies we'd hoped for and then some. It was a healthy introduction to a chunk of SA's common birds.
A huge strangler fig in Dlinza Forest.

We met Hugh and Loueen in a clearing at Dlinza where they brewed up some tea and coffee for us, plus a little bush breakfast (actually quite a feed). In between bites, we added several sunbird species to our list, plus the gorgeous purple-crested lourie (a large arboreal fruit eater that looks like a chachalaca on acid), and two honeyguide species--scaly-throated (heard) and sharp-billed.
Tommy, the Hungarian cameraman, films Kevin M. digiscoping at Dlinza, apres brekky.

A cooperative trumpeter hornbill in Dlinza. Thanks to Kevin for the poached shot thru his scope.

At this point I should probably state that there's no way I can do justice to all the birds we saw on the trip--something like 250 species. In fact, I'm pretty sure I can't even adequately cover the avian highlights. There was so much to see and absorb, and we went at it at such a pace, that, well, it's a bit of a blur.

Now I feel better.

After brekky, and a short time to get cleaned up back at the B&B, it was time to get on the road. We piled into our 15-person bus (called a "combi" in South Africa), tossing our luggage into a chest-freezer-sized trailer, and Petros, our Zulu driver (large rental vehicles in Africa often have a driver assigned to the trip--a good thing considering Christian's tendency to crane his neck constantly after birds).

This sunlit woodland scene at Dlinza reminded of my farm back home, and this shot from BOTB.

Our end-of-the-day destination was to be Bonamanzi Game Park, but we had a bunch of stops between here and there.

More on that in my next post....

4 comments:

On July 24, 2006 at 9:07 AM Anonymous said...

Cool hornbills! Did you get to see ground hornbill, too?

On July 24, 2006 at 10:04 AM Bill of the Birds said...

No. I was bummed to miss ground hornbill, and I missed my other most-wanted-to see species: secretarybird, though they (sec'y birds) were seen by others in our party.

Missed birds give me a great reason to return to SA.
As if I needed a reason to go back!

On July 24, 2006 at 11:23 AM Rondeau Ric said...

Better take Julie the next time!

On July 10, 2013 at 2:21 PM Anonymous said...

The first hornbill photo, labelled "Southern Yellow-billed Hornbill" is in fact an African Crowned Hornbill.
Hector


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