Saturday 30 April 2016

P is for Potoo: a mother and her chick

Step 1: Johan Fernandez had to help me out to see this bird so well camouflaged!
Step 2: OMG. It's a Great Potoo, and her chick!

Step 3: Creep around tree for a front view, they are so strange looking!

Step 4: Mom is sleeping but chick notices 5 humans creeping up taking photos!
Step 5: I am so bored, why do these humans hang around, I should be sleeping.


Y is for Yiguirro: Costa Rica's national bird

    yigüirro
    Clay-colored thrush. The clay-colored thrush (Turdus grayi) is a common Middle American bird of the thrush family (Turdidae). It is the national bird of Costa Rica, where it is well known as the yigüirro.
Clay-colored Thrush
One of the common birds here in Costa Rica and also widely distributed. It calls and sings continuously, is very people friendly and confiding, therefore it is well known by all of Costa Rica's people.

It's choice at first was not obvious to me when one considers all the other showy, huge, colourful, fierce birds, in fact some of the world's iconic birds, but this gentle little bird feels so right for this country of open, caring, and hard working people.


D is for Detail: finding hidden gems

Gaudy Tree Frog

As we walk in the forests it is so easy to miss what is right in front of us. 

The pleasure of being guided by locals, passionate about their environment, is that we are taught to see what is around us.

Johan showed us a frog hanging on for dear life under a leaf in Cope's garden. 

The humid rain-forests of Costa Rica are home to this vibrantly colored red-eyed tree frog, also known as the gaudy leaf frog.

Another tiny frog we saw is called the Blue Jeans frog, blue legs and red body.

The body of the Gaudy Leaf Frog is lime green with blue and yellow striped flanks and with white along the underbelly and inner legs. 


Honduran White Bats.
A little later, when we walking to see the Spectacled Owl, Cope went off the path and called us each in turn to look under a large frond. 

Bats. 

Tiny, Honduran White Bats. 

They are found in Panama, Nicaragua and here in Costa Rica. 

Their colour is unusual, white fur and a yellow nose.

They use the leaf as a tent and look cosy and snug!  They cling upside down onto the stem of the underside of the leaf, which offers protection from rain and predators. When the leaf eventually dies off they move house.

A very rare sighting indeed.

Even birding demands paying attention to the smallest detail, like the Yellow-legged Finch - when I eventually saw the little tennis balls of colour on its thighs I was thrilled, as was Martie!

Yellow-thighed Finch


A is for Art: Cope a Costa Rican artist


Cope's original art - the Spectacled Owl



We had the privilege to meet Cope Arte, a Costa Rican artist, photographer, birder and friend to Johan Fernandez.

Cope has developed a wetland in his garden with a hide and he hosts birders and photographers. We sat in this peaceful place, watched the hummingbird feeders, and the birds flitted in and out, they nibbled on the pawpaw and plantain on offer, all quite lovely.

Fred bought me two pieces of Cope's art for our 37th anniversary and I look forward to framing them.

Cope then jumped on his bicycle and took us to his favourite woods, showed us a hummingbird nest, bats and the star of the visit - a Spectacled Owl.
Spectacled Owl, deep in the forest.

N is for Neotropical: forests of Costa Rica

Female Great Curassow
Definition of neotropical. : of, relating to, or constituting the tropical New World biogeographic region that extends south, east, and west from the central plateau of Mexico.
Birding in the forests of the Le Selva Biological Station, Costa Rica
These Neotropic ecozones are very special, abundant flora and fauna, Martie says this is what the Garden of Eden would look like.

We have been birding on the Caribbean side of Costa Rica at 600m around Arenal Volcano, then dropped down to 50m while birding at Le Selva and we have now come to Pacific side of the country and will be finding high altitude species, at times over 2000m. We have sweated and felt so hot at the low elevations and now we are cool and layering to keep warm.

Johan Fernandez our guide has chosen his spots carefully to optimise these remarkable forest zones and the birds change significantly as we move around.

T is for Toucan: Black-mandibled Toucan


Nothing quite like watching a Toucan eating a frog, seeing the squirt of innards as the bird' huge bill snapped tightly.

They are the avian predators here in Costa Rica and their droll appearance and beautiful colouring belie their fierceness.

Certainly a birding highlight among so many amazing moments as we bird these Neotropical forests.


F is for Foodie Treat: Costa Rica on the menu.

A typical offering here in Costa Rica - Casados con Carne or Pollo



A marriage of rice and beans is the staple on our menus - for breakfast they are combined, at lunch they are separated, vegetables are simple and fresh, and the fried plantains are a yummy punch of sweetness. One breakfast I even had some on toast with honey. Cassava croquettes are quite delicious too as was the fried fish.

All works so well. I so enjoyed all my rice dishes - with chicken, with shrimps...

Loads of fresh fruits are available, in season are mangoes, pawpaws, melon, bananas, heady, sweet pineapple and watermelon. Delicious fruit juices.

Another gem is a small serving of rice pudding for after a meal. Rich, creamy and so good.

Fresh bounty wherever we went.

Wednesday 27 April 2016

S is for Size: huge ground birds to tiny specks high in the canopy

It's all about size! A Painted Gumtree in the background.
Forest birding is so challenging.

The dense undergrowth is perfect for Antbirds and Antpitta's to skulk but it makes for difficult sightings, I try fit together an image of the bird between, around and over all the vegetation! We then scan the lofty canopy which is alive with calls and the tiniest of birds. Our necks creak and the photographers complain.

The photo shows a large Crested Guan which is about 90cm compared to the Yellow-throated Euphonia on the bottom left and the Common Tody-Flycatcher on the bottom right which are no more than 10 cm from bill to tail.

And then of course, I have to then recall the bird and it's name....

H is for Hummingbirds: Green Violetear

Green Violetear.

I looked forward to seeing the hummingbirds here in Costa Rica and have not been disappointed.
In two days we have spotted 15 different 'hummers'. Johan Fernandez, our guide for the trip, took us to a garden with feeders yesterday en route to Arenal Volcano and the viewing was such a treat.

This photo of a Green Violetear shows off the delicate beauty of this tiny little bird and the sun illuminating the splash of violet.

T is for Tanagers: a female Passerini catches Fred's eye

Female Passerini Tanager
Among all the flash and high drama of the birds of Costa Rica, the camera caught the finer detail of the subdued colours of a female Passerini Tanager. The male is a showy black and red with a texture of velvet and she is so lovely in an understated way.

O is for an Oropendola: enjoying pawpaw.

Montezumo Oropendola, Arenal Observatory Lodge


The Montezumo Oropendolas are large social birds here in Costa Rica, they are highly vocal and keep us company as we stalk down the more secretive and skulking birds of the forest around the Arenal Volcano.

The call, the fabulous flash of the yellow on the tail and the facial detail make for a very interesting bird.

It also nests colonially in large trees. These nests are an achievement in weaving, looking like large, hanging baskets.
Montezumo Oropendola nest!

A is for Arenal Volcano: it puffs

Arenal Volcano, Costa Rica



We are birding in the shadow of Volcan Arenal. It looms over us at 1663m with its iconic conical shape and steep scree slopes.

It is what is known as a stratovolcano, which means a tall and symmetrical volcano built upon successive layers of rock, ash and lava.

It is partially active and when the clouds move off we could clearly see its emissions - a column of water vapour and gases.

Meanwhile, here at the Arenal Observatory Lodge we have been entertained by the antics of the White-nosed Coatis, relative of racoons, another tick on our mammal list.


M is for a Margay: meeting a new mammal


A nocturnal small native cat here in tropical Central America. This particular little beauty pops past the Arenal Observatory Lodge now and again for a meal of chicken breasts. It used to be the pet of the previous lodge owner and was released back into the wild. A little beauty.


Monday 25 April 2016

Z is for Zany: 'Van Gogh Ear', Rockefeller Centre.

Spring day, visiting Rockefeller Centre, NYC
Rockefeller Centre always surprises!

This visit we were so amused to see an enormous fibreglass swimming pool, upended and titled "Van Gogh's Ear". An inspired installation, zany and fitting for a perfect spring sunday morning on Manhattan.
Beautiful flowers lined the water features and the skyscrapers gleamed against the blue sky. Reminds me why I love a visit to New York, it always surprises me!


And picking up the fresh zingy Citrus Verbena Eau de Toilette from L'Occitane was a treat before ambling off to Central Park.

C is for a Clock: Grand Central Station


The clock atop the information booth in Grand Central Terminal is not only a beautiful work of art, it may be worth more than $10 million, because of the four opal faces on the clock. What a treat to head to Grand Central after arriving early on a sunday morning in New York. We wandered around this glorious building with its vast Concourse, stairways and fine details wherever we looked.


Vanderbilt and East 42nd Entrance to Grand Central Station

We were there!



Friday 22 April 2016

C is for Costa Rica: a new country is calling

A new adventure, a new country....
On the eve of our birding adventure to Costa Rica with Bernie and Martie Krone. We head off to New York tomorrow, transfer from JFK to Newark, then board a flight to San Jose.

We have a 10 day itinerary put together by a young local birder, Johan Fernandez, who guided Noah Stryker. Noah smashed the World Record in 2015 for the most number of birds sighted in a year.