Not surprisingly, a short week this week with no ferry on Tuesday due to Typhoon Koppu. I managed to get over on Wednesday and stayed one night.
The best day was actually last Sunday, when several people saw both Fairy Pitta and Siberian Blue Robin in the same area. No Fairy Pitta later in the week but I did manage a first-winter male Siberian Blue Robin on Wednesday evening which was almost certainly a different bird than that seen on Sunday. No photos though.
Also late on Wednesday evening, a Himalayan Swiftlet feeding over the sister’s café
This species has a very distinct erratic flight when feeding – more like a bat than a swift.
This is my fifth record of Himalayan Swiftlet on Po Toi, but strangely the Po Toi records are all at different dates to those for the rest of Hong Kong. Up to the end of 2004, all records of Himalayan Swiftlet in Hong Kong were in the period 14 January to 10 May. All my Po Toi records have been in two periods, two from 22 May to 25 May and three from 12 September to 28 September. What’s going on here?
A rare autumn fall of Brown Shrikes this week – 25 counted on Thursday and certainly many more on the Island. This is a highest ever Hong Kong autumn count, the previous highest being 10 on Cheung Chau on 18 September 1980 and my previous highest on Po Toi is 5.
Clearly the Typhoon was responsible and the fact that several adult
lucionensis Brown Shrikes were present (unusual for autumn) suggests that many of the birds were heading towards The Philippines and the Typhoon intercepted them and dumped them on the south China coast. Here photos of two different adult subspecies of Brown Shrike from this week, a
lucionensis with a grey crowned head and what looks like a
cristatus/confusus type with a reddish-brown crown.
Other good species this week included a resighting of one of the Orange-headed Thrushes on Wednesday and another Oriental Cuckoo on Thursday. At sea, a resighting of the Black-tailed Gull, the first Red-necked Phalarope and some small movements of terns, mostly Common.
Just to prove that anything is possible in the birding world, a Tufted Puffin from the north Pacific has just been seen and photographed at one of my old U.K. birdwatching sites, Oare Marshes in the county of Kent – several oceans and many thousands of miles from where it should be. Global warming and the opening of sea lanes from the Pacific to the Atlantic via northern Canada may be responsible. So, look out for Atlantic Puffin on the next Seabird Boat Trip.
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Last edited by wgeoff at 15/12/2009 05:11 ]