I've decided to abandon the 'South Islands' approach and report by location in future.
Back in action this week after packing my flat and leaving it in the not-so-tender hands of the wrecking crew. It takes 3 days to strip bare and 3 months to renovate, here’s what it looked like on Monday
Hopefully I can show you a better looking photo next February
Back to the birds. I managed two visits to Po Toi on Tuesday and Thursday. Both good days, the highlights were
Po Toi Tuesday 5th November – two Grey-headed Flycatchers and one Black-naped Monarch by the Upper School, plus Daurian Redstart, Common Blackbird, Japanese Bush Warbler, Brownish-flanked Bush Warbler, five Mountain Tailorbirds and the first Pallas’s Leaf Warbler.
Unfortunately no photos - I experimented using a small camera, failed, returned to the trusty Canon long lens on Thursday
Po Toi Thursday 7th November – a really good day. Two different Red-breasted Flycatchers and a Brambling were the photographic highlights
I also had a Brown Hawk Owl, two Japanese Thrush, the first Stub-tail Warbler with more Japanese and Brownish-flanked Bush Warblers, and three Little Buntings.
Even better, I was shown a photo of a cuckoo taken near the school which looked like a Northern Hawk Cuckoo – I’m hoping to show this later.
Plus, I was reliably told that a Pied Imperial Pigeon was on Po Toi last week. Strange things can happen on Po Toi, especially with the late typhoons we have had this year. Pied Imperial is an island specialist which can wander and it wouldn’t be the first rare pigeon to appear there. If anyone has seen photos of this bird, please contact me.
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Last edited by wgeoff at 8/11/2013 07:11 ]