A Garden Stroll and Likas Bay Lagoon
31 May 2013
Before being driven to Likas Bay Lagoon, I paid a brief visit to the small garden downstairs of Bay Shore Condominiums. The flowring trees still abounded in Brown-throated sunbirds, mostly juvniles which resembled females or immature males with incomplete face pattern.
But soon attention was paid to a cuckoo which likened more to Banded bay cuckoo than a female hepatic morph of Plaintive cuckoo, due largely to its face paler than the latter. Heowever, attempts to approach it to a shorter distance resulted in the bird flying further away and finally across the road towards the sloppy part of the area. It was at the moment when the cuckoo was out of sight when I spotted a second one, either a hepatic cuckoo or a Banded bay one, which followed suit of the first.
I was however rewarded with a good bird in the form of a Sunda pygmy woodpecker which was no more larger than a small bulbul but larger in head and body, pecking soundlessly and moved up branching parts of a short tree and once overhanging with head downward, affording me plenty of time to see even the indistinctive narrow red patch along the bottom of dark brown crown well behind eye.
Likas Bay Lagoon was connected in several places to the sea just some two hundred metres away on the other side of a busy road. It was less productive than was expected, only about three Purple herons, a Pacific reef, a host of Greats on a day-time roosting tree and some Little egretson the shallow water. And I was given opportunity to get familarized with the calls of Common ioras as I walked along the road.
S. L Tai