14th April 2013
Another attempt at spring migrants
Would the area be good as last time? It was with mixed feelings of hope and doubt that I started at seven five.
Large hawk cuckoos were heard all the way up to Picnic Site No. 9, making me to think that they must be the commonest spring/summer visiting cuckoos of local woods. Though careless of counting, surely there were at least three of them heard. In comparison, a Hodgson's was only heard once. While I was attracted and stayed to wait, standing and switching my position in the most favourable way, the bird refused to fly out in sight.
Pallas's warblers were still plenty in number but others were not found. On the same bare tree on the lawn before the road barrier I found the same Ashy drongo again, this time with a winged insect between its mandibles. I wondered how it could have uttered its usual call while its mouth was fully occcupied. It was then that I noticed the source came from the Black-winged cuckoo shrike just about two metres away seen just a moment ago. The cuckoo shrike must have associated with the drongo long enough to have learned, the latter's ususal call and the Goshawk's. A good personal discovery. Another Ashy was seen on the pass part, which I thought was a migrant.
Going back to just ten minutes ago, there were two Grey wagtails, flying and feeding quite restlessly - good evidence of them being migrants, for is it not that I found the same species quite common in Kinabalu National Park, HQ, Sabah last October? Also I did not find any of them on the catchment last time.
It was quite a sight to see a sizeable flock of starlings in migration. A group of about twenty or more was seen flying and perching on the tallest fir tree, but dashed lower down when a Black kite strolled past and soon joined by another lot of similar size. Soon they all dropped to a dense tree and started feeding on its dark berries, affording me a chance to identify them. A total of about fifty of White-shouldered starlings.
Migrant flycatchers I found not, but it was a delight to see a female Hainan blue - my first after an absence of three years or more from my sight - together with its prospective mating partner. It was the female that I heard first, not the male. But it was the male that I saw before the female, causing self-doubt in confidence before the finds supported my listening skills.
S L Tai
[ Last edited by tsheunglai at 14/04/2013 21:26 ]