19th November 2012 (Monday)
More Wintering Dancers Responding to Summons,2012
It is not easy to keep to one's birding station while other sites are claiming more and rarer birds
seen. Fortunately, being a member of the Four-hundred Club albeit a lowly junior one, I have room to spare and keep my attention more to the Shing Mun/Lead Mine Pass area.
The first bird seen was a Common buzzard - not a common bird at the site, I must say- thouhgh the first bird that caught my attention was the call of a loud Yellow-browed warbler. The third bird was all beyond my expectation. It was well aware of my approach. It let out an alarm call - two-noted and high pitched- and flew up to a slender tree that hung above that part of catchment channel just before it
joined the reservoir. An all dark bird, but just before I could manage to give it a name - it
flicked up its tail and down slightly before it fanned out its tail most extensively, all rich chestnut, leaving out no doubt it was the male dancer Plumbeous redstart. It gave me one more surprise. It pecked and swallowed a small red berry the tree produced. It must be desperately hungry to savour a berry kind of fruit.
I went down to the same location that I found a Red-throated flycatcher and an Asian brown flycatcher last Monday. Though I lingered on long enough to finsh my second half of sandwiches, both were not to be found.
When I reutrned from Picnic Site No. 8, the chance that the morning's count probably less than last time becamae to loom large, I made effort to search among a flock of Grey-throated minivets to locate a male Scarlet, followed the calls of a flowerpecker quick enough to see and identify it to be a male Fire-breasted/Buff-bellied flowerpecker, to claim a quiet Whiskered bulbul and a Blue-winged minla as seen - all just enough to reach thirty seven, two short of last Monday's number.
As a last resort I turned left and reached the big lawn adjacent to Picnic site No. 7. It was just White wagtails and OBPs to be found, little known that the second surprise of the morning awaited me here. Suddenly, a bird on the side of the rocky narrow stream jumped up, gave its tail a slight up-and-down flick and a wide fanning-out, this time jack black with large white side patches - the graceful
lady dancer's curtsy to welcome me - a female Plumbeous redstart.
With a Pygmy wren babbler and a Hwamei throwing me a face-saving line with their distinctive call, I was able to level at thirty-nine again, not a bad finale to my morning's work.
S L Tai
N.B. Thankful to all who continue to read my weekly reports and especially Mike Kilburn's kind and favourable comment.
[ Last edited by tsheunglai at 20/11/2012 21:57 ]