Logistics
- A two day trip with mid July to the beautiful and verdant island of Madeira to get a few more Western Pal birds under my belt.
- Saturday morning from Gatwick, returning on Monday early evening. Quite a long flight with a tense landing!
- Car hire free via Avis using a free weekend voucher, with only £29 spent in fuel.
- Cheap hotel with a rooftop swimming pool but in dire need of air-con .
- Excellent and cheap food throughout
- Lovely weather but a rather windy at the east of the island, calm elsewhere.
- Read a few trip reports but relied mainly on the excellent Madeira Seawatching website
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View of Zino's breeding area on Pico do Areeiro from Balcoe |
Itinerary
Saturday: Flight arrived early afternoon, leaving enough time to get up into the hills and tick off the endemics on the first afternoon.
Sunday: Early start back at Ribeiro Frio, early afternoon at Canical, afternoon sea-watching at Ponta da Cruz, late evening at Zino's Petrel breeding site on Pico do Areeiro.
Monday: Early start sea-watching from Porto Moniz, Laurel forest birding at Ribeira da Janela, some time on the high plains and then a mid-afternoon flight home.
Saturday
An uneventful flight from Gatwick saw me
land in Funchal at around 1pm local time – which is no different to Madeira
time. As a minor plane geek I have to say that landing was quite something. The
island rises vertically out of the sea, and the airport is perched right on the
edge. As you come in you see it all laid out, and then you bank over houses with
incredible winds buffeting the aircraft as it comes in to land on the runway
which is partially built on stilts. The captain came on and said the wind was
right on the limit of what he was prepared to undertake, any higher and we would
likely have diverted to Gran Canaria or indeed Lisbon, neither of which would
have increased my chances of seeing Trocaz Pigeon. As it was we made it in on
the first attempt, and with hand luggage only I was in my hire car and heading
up to the Laurel forests in under half an hour.
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Madeira ssp of Chaffinch |
It soon became apparent that my Peugeot 208
was not up to the task – the winding roads that lead up and into the centre of
the island are incredibly steep and I rarely got out of second gear. It took
about an hour to arrive at the Levada do Balcoes, which is a mountain path
leading to a wonderful lookout over a dramatic landscape, including the Zino’s
Petrel breeding colony – more on that later. Madeira Firecrests were literally
everywhere, and there were some extremely tame Chaffinches at the lookout. I
spent most of the afternoon here simply admiring the view, including getting some
great flypast views of Trocaz Pigeon. Plain Swifts repeatedly flew past my head,
and in lovely warm sunshine it was a memorable visit. Later on in the day I
carried on further north, and found the track up the valley that I had been
overlooking, known as the Faja da Nogueira. The road was very rough, but passable with care, and here I had
much better views of the Pigeons, and was also able to get some photos of the
Firecrests.
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Phonescope of Trocaz Pigeon. No, I'm not good at it! |
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Madeira Firecrest
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I returned to Funchal at dusk, finding my
hotel without difficulty, and thankfully it had off-street parking, although
fitting into a space did require a 328 point turn. I had dinner at a steak place
about two miles from my hotel, but the walk was very nice along the sea front,
and the cold beer once I arrived was spectacularly good.
Sunday
Unfortunately my Pelagic the following
morning had been postponed until the afternoon due to high winds having created
a backlog of customers, but I got up early anyway and went back up to the
forests given that the birds there are mostly all races that are either unique
to Madeira or the wider Macaronesian archipelago. I got great views of Robin,
Blackbird, Goldfinch, Atlantic Canary and a whole host of other common birds, as
well as even better views of the Pigeons. It was also a lot quieter in terms of
human traffic, and I largely had the place to myself. Mid morning, and with the
Pelagic looming, I headed off to the far East of the island and walked the
barren pensinsula out to Sao Lourenco, seeing the Madeiran form of Berthelot’s Pipit,
as well as many Kestrels and Rock Sparrow. Looking out to sea, I saw the boat I
would be on that afternoon making heavy weather, but amongst a scrum of Cory’s
Shearwaters. It was looking good, if slightly terrifying, however on my way to
the port my phone went off and it was Windbirds cancelling the afternoon trip
due to high winds. I would have been happy just with the Corys, however it was
billed as a cetacean and birds trip, and apparently there had been no Whales or
Dolphins whatsoever. I was really rather disappointed, especially as my original
slot had gone out, but there was not a lot I could do about it.
I drove west again to the Lugar de Baixo near Ponta do Sol, where
frankly the birds were disappointing. A ton of Muscovy Ducks, some Coots and a
Moorhen. I had a long and leisurely lunch on the beach and decided that as I
couldn’t get out on the sea I would seawatch from Funchal, so I perched myself
on the most southerly point at Ponta da Cruz, and started staring out to sea.
The birds from this point are pretty distant to be honest, but amongst the mass
of Cory’s Shearwaters were quite a few obviously Bulwers Petrels. Sadly the in
the time I was watching the loopy flight of a Pteredroma wasn’t seen, but with
more time spent I’m sure you would pick one up.
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Madeira has plenty of Monarch Butterflies |
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Fabulous flowers were everywhere on Madeira. Next time I go I might take a macro and make more of an effort. This is an Agapanthus. Obviously. |
I spent some time in the early evening
wandering around the Santa Catarina Park in central Funchal with an icecream,
and then went back to the hotel to rest up (and swim) before my evening trip. I
make a point of not paying for birding abroad where possible as I much prefer to
do it myself, however in this particular instance you are not allowed to visit
the location without a guide at night. This is probably as much to do with
health and safety as conservation. I’m of course talking about the famous Zino’s
Petrel night safari at the top of Pico do Areeiro. I was picked up at around 9pm,
and after a short tour of Funchal hotels to pick up other guests, drove for
about 40 minutes to the peak, leaving the vehicle near the radar station and
proceeding on foot with headlamps down a path along a ridge. The torches were
not really needed as the light from the stars was illumination enough. Living in
London you see the occasional star. At the top of a mountain on Madeira it’s a
totally different experience – there are thousands of stats. Put bins up to your
eyes and this whatever number you thought it was increases tenfold! The guides,
Hugo and Catarina led us to a narrow walkway and we all sat down to wait for the
activity to start, and I meanwhile lay down on the ground and looked up at the
cosmos as well as fiddling about with the bulb setting on my camera, which
without a remote release was a real pain!
About an hour after sunset, with the sky
horizon now totally dark, the first haunting calls started, a kind of deep whine
– a female Petrel. As time went on the males started chipping in, a higher
pitched call. The calls became more frequent, and some were very close indeed.
This was interspersed with the sound of air rushing over wings, indicating that
the birds were close, and sure enough we ended up getting good silhouetted views
of birds above our heads. We were at 1800m altitude at this point, interesting
to think these incredibly well-adapted birds that are masters of skimming the
waves live in burrows at the top of a jagged mountain range. We probably stayed
at the top of the mountain for about two hours before heading back, which was
largely a climb back to the van – it had been a great experience and I was all
tucked up dreaming about ridge-skimming Pteredromas and the endless universe by
1am.
Monday
With my appetite for sea-watching and rare
Petrels rekindled, I was at Porto Moniz the next morning staring out past Mole
Island. The sea-watching here was excellent, with birds a lot closer in that Ponta da Cruz. At one point the Cory's Shearwaters were piling past at the rate of 80 per minute, and with views good enough to see their beaks and a lot of fine detail this was where I stayed almost all morning before heading up to the Ribeira da Janela just to the east. Here I had even better views of Trocaz Pigeon including for the first time perched birds which I was able to study really well, and I'd easily recommend this as the best place to see this species, although it is further away from the airport than the central locations. Plenty of other good subs here too, including lots of Grey Wagtails of the form schmitzi.
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Plain Swift |
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Atlantic Canary |
With the flight departing at about 5pm, I had plenty of time to take the scenic route back to Funchal, and so took the ER209 back across the island. This led to some spectacular scenery, including some high-altitude plains with fantastic butterflies, and for some bizarre reason, stacks of Yellow-legged Gulls. My final stop of the trip was at Machico, just east of the airport, where an introduced population of Waxbills are flourishing in the reeds of the river/canal that flows through the town and onto the beach. You can't get into the riverbed, but the views from the pavement just above give perfectly adequate views. A quick fuel stop and a final icecream and that was that. The take-off was in complete contrast to the landing, and I reached a rainy Gatwick at about 10pm, and was home before midnight, another successful European tick-fest safely under the belt.
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Common Waxbill |
Trip List
Mute Swan
(Muscovy Duck)
Cory's Shearwater
Bulwer's Petrel
Zino's Petrel
Little Egret
Grey Heron
Coot
Moorhen
Buzzard
Kestrel canariensis
Yellow-legged Gull
Roseate Tern
Common Tern
Rock Pigeon
Pigeon
Trocaz Pigeon
Plain Swift
Berthelot's Pipit madereinsis
Grey Wagtail schmitzi
Robin
Blackbird cabrerae
Blackcap heineken
Madeira Firecrest
Chaffinch maderensis
Goldfinch parva
Atlantic Canary
Rock Sparrow
Common Waxbill