Wednesday 4 May 2016

C is for Chlorospingus: what's in a name


This Sooty-capped Chlorospingus is an endemic to Costa Rica and western Panama. This species inhabits mossy forests at elevations between 1600 and 2100m and sometimes ventures into cleared areas.

Each time I say the word Chlorospingus it makes me giggle, its rounded and sounds wonderfully goofy in my mouth. So some sightings stick because of a name!

In the parking lot at Hotel Savegre, high up in the mountains, this little bird did venture out into the open and was obsessed with the car mirror. Fred was able to capture these super images. So much easier than photography in the forest.



F is for Friends: travelling Costa Rica with Bernie and Martie

Costa Rica moments.
This year of travel is about celebrating all that I enjoy and love. It is also a birthday milestone for Martie and me.

How wonderful to mark the occasion by choosing to travel and bird here in Costa Rica.

Ten days of frenetic birding, quiet moments at a hide, floating down a mangrove swamp, long walks through dense tropical forests, tramping, finding good food and beers for Bernie, laughter, exhaustion and excitement, 'leaking' skin, traffic and peace, learning about a new country, meeting new people.... all in the company of special friends.

Thank you Bernie and Martie.

P is for Pacific Ocean: a sunset

It was only two months ago that we were on the balcony with Guy and Inel at their beach house in Killcare, north of Sydney, watching the sunrise over the Pacific Ocean.

And here we are in Garabiti, Costa Rica, this time taking in a sunset over this same vast ocean. Remarkable.

Fred took the opportunity to capture the moment, the fishing boat and the wood storks feeding in the surf.

T is for Tanagers: keeping us company

Blue-gray Tanager
Each day the tanagers keep us company, whether in the forests, or in the gardens, they are a constant pleasure.

Some muted like the Palm Tanager, others fine pastel colours like the Blue-gray Tanager, and then the boldly patterned, like the Speckled Tanager and richly coloured conspicuous Tanagers, like the male Passernini with his bright red and black.

Palm Tanagers

I is for Iridescence: Costa Rica's avian jewels

Volcano Hummingbird, male Talamanca race.
We would have been lost without the hummingbird feeders!

White-throated Mountain-gem
Restaurants, hotels, lodges and even private homes all hang custom-made plastic feeders filled with
sugar water for the 'hummers'. The coming and going can be frantic, especially with Johan Fernandez calling all the different species, whether a male or a female. And as small as these birds are they have these long-winded and even double-barrelled names - like Purple-throated Mountain-Gem! Its hard enough to see them, never mind remember the naming convention.

Nor are they all called Hummingbirds, I saw - Sicklebills, Sabrewings, Hermits, Brilliants, Jacobins, Woodnymphs, Emeralds, Goldentails, Plumeleteers, Mangos, Violetears, Starthroats, Mountain-gems, Thorntails, Woodstars... in total 34 of these avian jewels made it onto my bird list and they are a highlight each time they zip into view with their iridescent and varied colours.

White-necked Jacobin at the feeder.
Joy of flashing colour!

F is for Feeders: the pleasure of watching the comings and goings


Large-footed Finch enjoying a grain of rice.
The Costa Ricans are as generous with food for the birds as they were with food for us on this trip. Feeders were piled high with rice, pawpaws and bananas. Wherever we stopped we would pop past these homemade wooden feeders, rustic and charming, to see which birds were enjoying the spoils.

Life at these feeders was such a pleasure to watch. It gave me close up views of birds that can be tricky to see properly when flitting around the canopy.

From top left: Clay-colored Thrush, Flame-colored Tanager, Buff-throated Saltator, Speckled Tanager and female Cherrie's Tanager
Even the Red Squirrel loved finding a piece of banana at the feeder.