Spotted Ground Thrush (photo: Stan Culley) |
Attendees: Hazel Nevin, Graham & Sue Salthouse, Stan
& Val Culley, Stanley & Asothie Gengan, Lennart Erikssen & Evelyn
Heunis, Albert & Denise Pienaar, Doug Butcher, Robin Eccles & Hanli
Kloppers, Desiree Kruger & Butch Goldstone, Bob & Hazel van Rooyen (18)
Species
identified: 60 Text: Hazel van Rooyen
Sunday dawned full of good possibilities and proved true to
its promise – good weather, good birding and an enthusiastic bunch of 18
people!
Meeting up just inside the gate and parking next to the
river, Blacksmith Lapwing, 3-banded Plover, Egyptian Goose and Yellow Weaver
were soon seen, along with a Yellow-billed Kite.
Yellow-billed Kite (photo: HvR) |
We then drove round to the picnic site where we parked the vehicles and paid our R20 per car to Keith Layfield who does a really excellent job of looking after the reserve, on a volunteer basis. It was such a pleasure to spend our day there.
From here we took the grasslands trail, spotting
Yellow-rumped Tinkerbird, Black-collared Barbet, Cardinal Woodpecker, Olive
Sunbird, Common Waxbill amongst others.
Hazel Nevin led us to where she was sure we would see the Little
Bee-eaters and indeed there were two swaying in some tall reeds. Little Rush Warbler and Tawny-flanked Prinia
could be heard and a Burchell’s Coucal gurgled some way off. A flock of about 8 Cape Crows was a surprise
sighting, being unusual for this area.
Brown-hooded Kingfisher with mud on her beak (photo: Lennart Erikssen) |
The people (photo: Lennart Erikssen) |
Coming back down to the grassland we noticed an unfamiliar brown & blue butterfly. This turned out to be a Forest Queen which my book says is one of the most saught-after butterflies. The appearance of bluey-green in the males is a phenomenon "created by diffraction of light rays striking the microscopic sculpturing of the white areas".* So now we know!
Forest Queen (Charaxes wakefieldi) (photo: HvR) |
A cisticola singing
from high on a tall dead tree was initially identified as Red-faced but on closer inspection later discovered
to be a Rufous-winged Cisticola.
Rufous-winged Cisticola (photo: Stan Culley) |
So far it had been an eventful morning and after a well-earned breakfast most of us took the forest path where Alfred had already found a Spotted Ground Thrush. And yes indeed, with everyone treading carefully in the dead leaf litter, Stan spotted it on the path where it shot off. However after a little while it decided we weren’t a danger and showed itself again, typically turning over dead leaves looking for grubs with gusto.
Spotted Ground Thrush (photo Doug Butcher) |
We searched in this area for the Black-throated Wattle Eye but weren’t lucky. We did spot Golden-tailed Woodpecker, Purple-crested Turaco and Southern Black Tit along this trail which is very pretty with little bridges and tinkling streams. Arriving back at the river Common Sandpiper and Pied Wagtail were busy foraging at the water’s edge while a Black Saw-wing performed aerial acrobatics. White-eared Barbets perched on the tops of the Strelitzias.
White-eared Barbet (photo: Doug Butcher |
Doubling up in the vehicles, Hazel Nevin led us up the hill
to the Crookes family church. Along the
way she pointed out a new retirement village where the famous Elsa Pooley
(botanist, landscaper, author) had planted a hillock with attractive and
colourful indigenous flora. However, there
was another purpose for this detour and from the bottom of the pretty church-yard
we could look over the stone wall to where the Crowned Eagles were busy nesting
and we watched for quite a while.
African Crowned Eagle taking off (photo: Stan Culley) |
People in the churchyard (photo: HvR) |
In the meantime a Natal Spurfowl was creating a disturbance in the bush close by and Red-winged Starlings flew in flocks between the Erythrina trees, murmering and twittering happily. Fantailed Widowbird and Black-headed Oriole were also seen.
After all this excitement we proceeded back to the reserve
where Keith had shown us where we could braai with some privacy from the usual
Sunday picnickers. Thank you once again
to TC Robertson for letting us share their very special “bird patch”.
Species Identified: 59
*Field Guide to Butterflies of Southern Africa by Ivor Migdoll
(All photos property of photographer)
African Crowned Eagle (photo: HvR) |
Black-collared Barbet (photo: HvR) |
Barbet, Black-collared
Barbet, White-eared
Bee-eater, Little
Boubou, Southern
Brownbul, Terrestrial
Bulbul, Dark-capped
Bushshrike, Orange-breasted
Cameroptera, Green-backed
Cisticola, Rufous-winged
Cormorant, Reed
Coucal, Burchell’s
Crow, Black
Darter
Dove, Red-eyed
Drongo, Fork-tailed
Eagle, Crowned
Egret, Little
Firefinch, African
Flycatcher, Dusky
Flycatcher, Southern Black
Goose, Egyptian
Goose, Spurwing
Greenbul, Sombre
Greenbul, Yellow-bellied
Ibis, Hadedah
Kingfisher, Brown
Kingfisher, Pied
Kite, Yellow-billed
Lapwing, Black-smith
Mannikin, Bronze
|
Mousebird, Speckled
Oriole, Black-headed
Pigeon, African Green
Plover, 3-banded
Prinia, Tawny-flanked
Robin-Chat, Red-capped
Rush Warbler, Little Rush
Sandpiper, Common
Saw-wing, Black
Spurfowl, Natal
Starling, Red-winged
Sunbird, Amethyst
Sunbird, Collared
Sunbird, Olive
Swallow, Lesser-striped
Thrush, Spotted Ground
Tinkerbird, Red-fronted
Tinkerbird, Yellow-rumped
Tit, Southern Black
Turaco, Purple-crested
Wagtail, Pied
Waxbill, Common
Weaver, Spectacled
Weaver, Thick-billed
Weaver, Village
Weaver, Yellow
White-eye, Cape
Widow, Fantailed
Woodpecker, Cardinal
Woodpecker, Golden-tailed
|
*Field Guide to Butterflies of Southern Africa by Ivor Migdoll
(All photos property of photographer)