Attendees: Sandy Olver, Andrew Pickles, Michelle
Pearson, Clive & Margie Cowan, Graham & Sue Salthouse, Doug & Angie
Butcher, Irma Smook, Margaret Jones, Hazel Nevin,, Stan & Val Culley,
Andrew Maree, Barrie Willis, Sue Hansbury and Cameron Den, Alastair Warman,
Robin Eccles, Tim & Heather Thompson, Bob & Hazel van Rooyen (24)
(Text: Hazel van Rooyen)
Bird count:: 54 (see end)
Sunday 24 April was a day we were
all looking forward to as we were going to one of our favourite places, Oribi
Gorge, and also paying a visit to the Vulture Hide. Starting at the hutted camp, an excellent number
of 24 people turned up and eagerly made their way to the grasslands leading to
a view down into the gorge. It was still
a bit early for birds (and the campers who were emerging bleary-eyed from their
huts for coffee on their patios and wondering where all these senior citizen’s
had materialised from, jaunting passed their huts at the crack of dawn).
The front-runners disturbed a
Yellow-throated Longclaw which flapped and glided off over the grass-tops in
surprise and surveyed us from a dead tree.
The group split into two, some took the high road and some took the low
road – we didn’t make it to Scotland but we did all meet up at the gorge. Here we spent a while examining the gorge and
surrounds, spotting a Little Sparrowhawk, Black-headed Oriole, Golden-tailed
Woodpecker, African Dusky Flycatcher. A
flock of Trumpeter Hornbills landed in a few dead Lombardy Poplar trees,
calling out like babies - as they do. A
pair of Olive Pigeons were also spotted.
Completing the loop we passed the edge of the forest where Sombre
Greenbulls were calling, “Willie Willie”.
Moving back up the entrance road we knew there was a dam at the top but
couldn’t see it for long grass. It was
almost surrounded by an electric fence but we squeezed through a gap
successfully. Andrew Pickles unintentionally
tested the fence to see if it was live and getting a bit of a shock, concluded
that it was! Could only happen to Andrew
– our electrical expert! As we
approached the dam a Jackal Buzzard glided away and a pair of African Black
Duck took off, flying in perfect synchronisation. Barn Swallows, Common Moorhen and Egyptian
Goose also put in an appearance.
African Black Duck - synchronised flying (photo: Hazel van Rooyen) |
African Black Duck (photo: Hazel van Rooyen) |
Having breakfast looking up the cliffs (photo: Dooug Butcher) |
Bark Spider? (photo: Hazel van Rooyen) |
A scary
spider hung in its web in the bushes, I identified this as a Bark Spider but am
not an expert. An African Fish Eagle
called overhead and we all sighed contentedly at the beauty surrounding us. After coffee, some took a walk up the road spotting
an Olive Sunbird while others went a short way up the Hoopoe Falls path identifying
Grey Cuckoo-Shrike, Cape Batis, Cape White-eye, Yellow-rumped Tinkerbird, Knysna
Turaco, and Dark-backed Weaver amongst others.
Hearing the near-threatened Knysna Woodpecker calling close by we excitedly
searched the trees but sadly couldn’t spot it.
Hereford or Nguni? (photo: Doug Butcher) |
On the way to our next venue a beautiful bull grazed in a field. I don’t know much about cattle but it struck
me as having a Hereford shape with the hide of the eye-catching Nguni breed.
White-necked Raven(photo: Stan Culley) |
Vulture Viewing Hide - Andy Ruffles pride (photo: Hazel van Rooyen) |
White-necked Raven (photo: Andrew Pickles) |
Cape Vulture (photo: Stan Culley) |
Cape Vulture coming into land (photo: Hazel van Rooyen) |
Cape Vulture fetching nesting material (photo: Hazel van Rooyen) |
At the cliff-edge we were fascinated to see the vultures wheeling about, flying to and from the rocky ledges where, being breeding season, they were taking nesting material.
Precarious nesting place but not if you are a Cape Vulture | (photo: Hazel van Rooyen) |
Sandy Olver looking at the vultures | (photo: Hazel van Rooyen) |
Kalanchoe luciae - Bird Brandy (photo: Hazel van Rooyen) |
Andrew Pickles was lucky enough to get a close sighting of the rare Oribi, after which of course the area is named.
Oribi Male (photo: Andrew Pickles) |
Knysna Woodpecker (photo: Hazel van Rooyen) |
Knysna Woodpecker (photo Hazel van Rooyen) |
Enjoying the braai (photo: Doug Butcher) |
Cape Vulture (photo: Doug Butcher) |
Count: 54 species
Barbet
Black-collared
Batis
Cape
Boubou
Southern
Bulbul
Dark-capped
Buzzard
Jackal
Camaroptera
Green-backed
Chat
Familiar
Cormorant
Reed
Crane
Grey Crowned
Cuckoo-shrike
Grey
Dove
Red-eyed
Drongo
Fork-tailed
Drongo
Square-tailed
Duck
African Black
Eagle
Long-crested
Falcon
Lanner
Fiscal
Common (Southern)
Fish-eagle
African
|
Flycatcher
African Dusky
Goose
Egyptian
Greenbul
Sombre
Ground-thrush
Spotted
Hornbill
Crowned
Hornbill
Trumpeter
Ibis
Hadeda
Kingfisher
Brown-hooded
Longclaw
Yellow-throated
Moorhen
Common
Olive-pigeon
African
Oriole
Black-headed
Prinia
Tawny-flanked
Puff-back
Black-backed
Raven
White-necked
Robin-Chat
Red-capped
Sparrowhawk
Little
Starling
Red-winged
|
Stonechat
African
Sunbird
Collared
Sunbird
Olive
Swallow
Barn
Tinkerbird
Yellow-rumped
Tit
Southern Black
Turaco
Knysna
Turtle-dove
Cape
Vulture
Cape
Wagtail
Cape
Warbler
Yellow-Throated Woodland
Waxbill
Common
Weaver
Dark-backed
White-eye
Cape
Wood-hoopoe
Green
Woodpecker
Golden-tailed
Woodpecker
Knysna
|
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