Another trip began at 2am Saturday morning with Ramesh from
Malaysia. After pick up in Bangkok we headed straight to Pak Thale for the
Spoon Billed Sandpiper. We arrived just as dawn was breaking. As we walked
towards the end of the track, plenty of birds were present. Kentish, Pacific
Golden, Lesser and Greater Sand Plovers were the first followed by Black-winged
Stilts. Towards the end a huge flock of Red and Great Knots soared past. At the
pump shed we started scanning a good sized flock of Red-necked stints for a
Spoonbill. Almost immediately, the first
one came into sight, then another and another, with one more bringing the tally
to four different birds. Two flagged and two unflagged birds. We didn’t stay too
much longer, but not before bagging a few Curlews, Egrets, Grey Herons, a
Spotted Redshank, a Black Kite and a Long-toed stint. We left with Ramesh
reveling in his first Spoonie sightings.
Spoon Billed Sandpiper |
Along the road to Kaeng Krachan Chestnut-headed and
Blue-tailed Bee-Eaters, White-throated Kingfishers, Cattle egrets, Brown
Shrikes and a single Javan Pond heron were seen.
We arrived at Kaeng Krachen and checked in at Samarn
Birdcamp. Straight into the park and the first birds were more lifers for
Ramesh, a pair of Black-thighed Falconets and a Blue-bearded Bee-Eater. Further
along the entrance road a Crested Serpent Eagle posed nicely. After arriving at
Ban Krang for a spot of lunch we headed up to Km 28. Bird activity was good, we
staked out for the Black and Buff Woodpecker with no result, but were surprised
to see a head poking out of the same tree a little higher up. A Buff-rumped
Woodpecker, and another lifer.. Other
birds of note here were Ratchet-tailed Treepies, Sulpur-breasted warbler,
Blue-throated Barbet, Rufous-winged Philentoma, Grey-headed Canary Flycatcher,
Black-winged Cuckooshrike and Long-tailed Broadbill. As we left the park, the
last bird of the day was a majestic Sultan Tit.
Crested Serpent Eagle |
Buff-rumped Woodpecker |
Day 2
We headed into the park again for a morning session hoping
to tick the rest of the Broadbill boxes. Along the entry road we struggled to
find the Black and Red, so headed for the streams. Between streams 1 to 3 bird
action was buzzing. The Dusky Broadbill was the first Broadbill box ticked on
the hunt. A tall tree hosted Oriental Pied and Brown Hornbills along with 4-5
Great Slaty Woodpeckers. During the next few hours we notched up Green Magpies,
Greater Yellownapes, Mountain Hawk Eagle, Oriental Honey Buzzard, Swinhoe’s
Minvets, Asian Fairy Bluebirds, Green-billed Malkoha, Dollar Birds, Collared
Falconets, Puff-throated and Rufous-fronted Babblers, a Verditer Flycatcher and
7 species of Bulbul amongst others. A third Broadbill tick was the Silver
Breasted. With time running out we headed back to Ban Krang with hopes for the
Banded and Black and Yellow Broadbill. The Black and Yellow was calling from
far in the distance, but we couldn’t get a lock on for a sighting. Time ran out
so we had to head off back to the airport not before an Indian Cuckoo perch a
few metres away for those last shots.
Brown Hornbill |
Indian Cuckoo |
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