Raptor Run, Springbok Flats 2nd December 2012
Bruce and Grant Williamson
Bruce picked me up at 0430hrs with Grant and we set off for
the Springbok flats, an area of farmland and bush.
With the recent rains I was hoping for some interesting
birds to be present in good numbers. Our first bit of action was finding
several hundred Amur Falcon and Lesser Kestrels all perched on the trackside in
trees. We got a small trap down and watched several Amurs and Lessers come in
and hover over the mouse in the trap, and eventually got a lovely male Lesser
Kestrel.
We tried all the usual good routes and were wondering where
all the birds had gone when we hit a hotspot and found several Steppe Buzzards
on poles. We managed to bas two birds, both sub adults and in good shape at 770
and 820 grams.
We were going along one section when we came across a large
eagle which had me perplexed for a while. At first I thought it was a Wahlberg’s
Eagle, unusual for here but on closer inspection discovered it to be a
Lesser-spotted Eagle, very unusual!!
We got a trap down for the bird and waited, when a
Black-chested Snake Eagle came over very high up and started dropping!
It came down in ‘stages’ until it was right over the trap
when all of a sudden the Lesser Spotted Eagle took off and chased the
Black-chested away! The Lesser-spot returned to its perch and the Black-chested
disappeared!! Bugger! We spent an hour trying to coax the LS, to no avail as it
looked to be feeding on termites in the field.
Our next customer was a Brown Snake Eagle on a pole along a
little used track. We got the trap down and in no time the bird was on! We dashed
in and I got hold of the bird, quite a beast at 2150kg and an adult. I would so
love to know where this bird originated from, oh to put a satellite harness on
such a bird. Very few nest records in SA.
One of the birds we were really hoping for was a Lanner.
Michael Parker spent the day up here last Saturday and was very unlucky not to
have caught a couple and had no less the 5 birds react to his trap. But not a
Lanner in sight!
We managed to get one more Steppe Buzzard, a juv and then
called it a day and made tracks back to the big smoke.
We got one more bird, a Pear-spotted Owlet, sitting on a traa in the afternoon, probably a bit cold and hungry given the way it attacked the trap!6 birds was not bad and we could have caught a few Black-shouldered Kites, but rather wanted to spend time going for Palearctic migrants and Eagles.
1 comment:
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