I returned to Hong Kong on Tuesday after three weeks in UK and took a last-minute decision to go to Po Toi on Thursday.
Good decision. The photo of the Fairy Pitta is elsewhere but I don't mind to repeat it here
This is my sixth record of Fairy Pitta on Po Toi, three in late spring and three in early autumn, with five being up the valley above the Sister's Cafe - 'Pitta Valley'.
Given the weather, this bird may stay a few days - if you can manage to get there.
The other most noticeable feature of yesterday was the number of Brown Shrikes in the main area. I counted 84, more than ever before in this small area, all
lucionensis except one
cristatus near the helipad and one very pale bird in front of the Sister's Cafe which I guess was just a pale
lucionensis - maybe worth looking out for if you are on Po Toi this weekend.
Also good counts of nine Grey Wagtails, five Dollarbirds and fourteen Arctic Warblers but rather surprisingly, no Yellow or other Bitterns which I did expect to see.
As it's been such a poor spring (so far) for land bird migrants, I've been looking at HKO reports of daily weather in March and April this year. The most revealing feature is the complete absence of north winds, from 19 February through to 27 April, unprecendented in my records from 2005 to date.
In fact this has been going on since November 2013, with only 16 north wind days in the six months from November 2013 to April 2014, versus an average of 50 north wind days over the same six month period for the previous eight years. I guess this is related to the expected arrival of El Ninyo this summer.
North wind days are usually the ones which cause spring arrivals of migrants on Po Toi. So, the first north wind since 19 February was Sunday 27 April - the day the Rosy Minivet arrived on Po Toi, not a co-incidence I think.
Fortunately autumn migration is not usually so affected by winds and weather, but an El Ninyo bringing more and later typhoons to Hong Kong would have an effect. In the past, autumn typhoons have tended to temporarily stop normal migration but have resulted in some unexpected autumn species.
So maybe partly good news.
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Last edited by wgeoff at 9/05/2014 11:04 ]