Friday, May 31, 2019

Broad-winged Hawks, now we know what to do!

On my way over to Canada, I stopped of briefly in the UK to ring a brood of Tawny Owls with Paul Roper, oh and a quick hello to Mum and family!

But I was very keen to get to Canada and to spend the next 4 weeks in the woods of upstate Ontario looking for Broad-winged Hawks to ring (Band) with my Charlotte.

Thanks to Simcoe County Banding Group and coordinator Nigel Shaw, we had got some colour bands for the birds and armed with these we set off up into 'cottage' country and the land of a thousand lakes.

last year we did exceptionally well with 46 birds banded, and hoped to repeat that success, but what we ended up with was right off the chart of anything we could have imagined, with a huge tally of 97 birds banded plus a retrap!!!

Our first session got off to a flying start and in particular re-trapping a bird from last year in exactly the same place! This bird (now X05!) had been all the way down to South America and back to the same tree almost!

Out of all the birds we caught we only got one juvenile (2nd year) with the remainder all adults, with most 1st year birds staying on the over wintering grounds.

New ones for me were seeing a Black Bear for the fist time, a gorgeous beast we disturbed sunbathing in a meadow! The only 'tick' was a Purple Finch, a smart bird. Also finally going to see Niagra Falls when we went to go pick up my niece Flora who was taking a work break from NY to come see us!



smart birds are Broadwings..
X05, back at the same spot

Bear tick!

view from our friends Jan and Ralphs dock

Purple Finch 
adult male American Kestrels were around, we got several 





adult male American Redstart
Charlotte and her favourite, Barred Owl!





quite often we would get whats called a 'double header' two birds on one trap!


Thursday, April 25, 2019



Rwanda March 2019

This incredibly friendly and amazing country is an absolute pleasure all round!
I was with Graeme Dunlop who was going to help me by running the ringing whilst I gave a 3 week guide training course at 3 different sites.
We visited the Bugesera region with all its wetlands, Akagera National Park with its Serengeti type savanna and the Montane rainforest site of Nyungwe National Park with its 27 Albertine Rift Endemics.
We really caught some incredible species here, Neumann's Warbler, Grauer's Warbler, and Grauer's Swamp Warblers! Hardly possible to see these birds normally and only in the Albertine Rift Endemic area.
We made history by catching Rwandas first Little Weaver! as well as its 9th Collared Flycatcher!
We also caught 64 Willow Warblers over the 3 weeks, as well as Reed, Garden and Eastern Olivaceous Warblers and a European Golden Oriole. Definitely can't wait to go back!

Papyrus Gonolek, bit of a shocker!

Greater Swamp Warbler, huge feet!

Golden Oriole

Ruaha Chat, was Arnott's once!

Collared Flycatcher 4f 9th for RW!

1st Little Weaver for RW!!

Equatorial Akalat

Tullberg's Woodpecker

Rwenzori Batis ARE

Nyungwe Forest

Id never seen one of these before! Kungwe Apalis ARE!

Dusky Crimsonwing ARE

Red-throated Woodland Warbler, a phyllosc! ARE

Grauer's Swamp Warblers ARE

Neumann's Warbler like a little Pitta! ARE

White-bellied Elminia

Grauer's Warbler ARE

Red-faced Crimsonwing

Blue-headed Sunbird ARE

Regal Sunbird my fave! ARE

Doherty's Bush Shrike

Abyssinian Thrush


Wednesday, April 24, 2019

South Africa March Limpopo trip

the next trip was with Richard Dobbins, Wendy James, Alison Rees, Ian Begg, Mike Polling and Andrew Hughes. Richard has now been with me on 4 trips and Wendy one 8 years previously to Uganda.
We did the same circuit as last time but stayed at a few different sites. We did exceptionally well for raptors with 65 birds ringed of 21 species, a new trip record! including another Tawny Eagle and a Secretarybird!! This was just crazy, but I was very happy to have tried out a plan I've always said would work and it did!
We flushed the bird coming over the crest of a hill, high up on the grasslands of the Freestate and watched it work a fenceline which, i could eventually see joined the road. So we drove fast some 500m and deployed trap the same side of the fence the bird was working and retreated. After some 10 minutes, the bird appeared over a crest in the track and suddenly saw the trap and pounced!! What a handful!!
We also did a session at a small bridge which had a colony of SA Cliff Swallows under it, catching a page or two of these little Afro-tropical migrants. We also got 3 European Nightjars one night as they came out of roost. We also got a Freckled Nightjar, not something you catch everyday!

juv BC Snake Eagle

adult female Lanner

Freckled Nightjar

adult m Lesser Kestrel
grumpy Spotted Eagle Owl


a kamikaze Red-crested Korhaan!
Ian and Andrew with a double header of African Hawk-eagles!


adult female Tawny

lovely Tawny!

Euro Roller

Wendy with an early morning Wahlberg's Eagle 
Juv Af Gos
Yellow-throated Woodland Warbler, a nice little endemic phyllosc!



the Secretarybird!
Richard trying to contain the Secretarybird!


juv BC Snake Eagle

Cliff Swallow

3rd year Secretarybird