Although I am billing this as a trip report in fact it was a
morning birding the island that I managed to slip in during a short trip away
with one of my kids. We were there for snorkeling primarily, but it just so
happened that my sister and her kids were on holiday there too, a complete
coincidence, so I managed to negotiate a play date with cousins and went off
for a few hours. As such I am dispensing with the usual logistics and
itinerary, and just going for a glorified trip list. I did engage a guide (as I frequently do
where birding is a side-show) but in truth I am not sure I got
great value from this. My guide came away with two island ticks which probably
tells you all you need to know - there is no delicate way to say this - he was simply not impressive, and professional bird guides need to be impressive. First off he did not have a telescope, so we could not identify anything distant such as small waders. Secondly he was not remotely up to date with island birding. That said I was very much in a Caribbean frame of mind, relaxed and happy as opposed to nervous and twitchy, and my guide was very
personable and similarly relaxed, so I had a fun morning. He also had a car and he did know the sites, so I guess that without him my ability to find and get to the sites that
held the key birds would have been limited, at least not without a ton of
research that I did not have time to do.
Barbados does not have many birds, and the single endemic – the Barbados
Finch – is completely ubiquitous and will be seen almost everywhere. The Barbados
Golden Warbler (Dendroica petechia ssp petechia) is an endangered and endemic
subspecies of the very complicated Yellow Warbler complex so that was worth
seeing, but apart from that there is nothing on the island that you won’t be
able to see somewhere else. In other words don’t bother go to Barbados for a
birding holiday, unless it is half a day as part of a wider Caribbean trip. Do go to Barbados if you want to meet friendly people, eat great food, and have a very chilled out holiday. Here
is a quick run-down of the sites I went to.
Oistins
A small number of Royal Terns were present on the Jetty here with some Laughing Gull.
Graeme Hall Nature Sanctuary, Bridgetown
This is closed to the public and has been for several years –
the owner is in dispute with the Barbados Government over their lack of action
in preventing external factors from damaging the mangrove habitat. You can view
into it along the sluice that used to feed the swamp, and it was here that I
got the Golden Warbler in the trees. Solitary Sandpiper was here too, along
with Caribbean Elaenia, Caribbean Martin, Antillean Crested Hummingbird and Black-faced Grassquit.
Chancery Lane Swamp
Viewed this wetland area from the residential streets at the NW
corner, but as neither my guide nor I had a scope it was hard work. Lesser
Yellowlegs, Snowy Egret and Great White Egret were obvious, as was the vagrant
American Flamingo that had, unbeknownst to my guide, been on the island for
about six months. Barbados needs a birding Whatsapp group. Semipalmated Plover, Least Sandpiper and Semipalmated
Sandpiper also present in decent numbers but without a scope the views were rubbish.
Inch Marlowe
A rocky shoreline east of Bridgetown was unfortunately quite sparse in bird life at the time of my visit, but I expect that in different weather you might get fly-by Terns and Frigatebirds. There were no waders on the beach.
Woodbourne Refuge
A series of small ponds near the village of that are extremely rich in bird life.
The first bird I set eyes on was a Spoonbill. My guide couldn’t believe it,
Roseate Spoonbill would have only been his second! I had concerns though, mainly about how white
it was, how not pink it was, and somewhat telltale black in the wings. Frankly
it was suspiciously like a Eurasian Spoonbill, which was very confusing indeed.
An escape perhaps? But who keeps Spoonbills? We carried on birding, great views of Least Sandpiper and Pectoral Sandpiper here.
Bayfield Pond
This is basically a village duck pond, but I actually got
another tick here, Masked Duck, a bird I had been hoping to see and that I had
missed elsewhere on other trips to the region. They were incredibly hard to see
on even a small pond, and it took another bird guide turning up to show us
exactly where. Very smart little things, I know it is bad to anthropomorphise but
they looked very cheeky. The other guide also confirmed that there was a
Eurasian Spoonbill knocking about and that it was a genuine vagrant that had
been on the island. I still think I can legitimately claim this as a find as I knew none of this. - apparently this is not the first either, with a record in 2008 of two birds. Anyway, the important thing is that my guide got
another tick…Plenty of Green Heron in breeding plumage here too, and lots of Common Gallinules.
Westmoreland Resort
The lake near the main road had a large flock of Black-bellied
Whistling Ducks as well as two Fulvous Whistling Duck.
Trip List
1. Barbados Finch
2. Scaly-naped Pigeon
3. Zainada Dove
4. Carib Grackle
5. Antillean Crested Hummingbird
6. Green-throated Carib
7. Green Heron
8. Cattle Egret
9. Magnificent Frigatebird
10. Laughing Gull
11. Grey Kingbird
12. Bananaquit
13. Royal Tern
14. Collared Dove
15. Common Gallinule
16. Ground Dove
17. Caribbean Martin
18. Greater Flamingo
19. Eurasian Spoonbilll
20. Masked Duck
21. Great White Egret
22. Snowy Egret
23. Black-faced Grassquit
24. Caribbean Elaenia
25. Yellow Warbler
26. Black-bellied Whistling Duck
27. Fulvous Whistling Duck
28. Turnstone
29. Spotted Sandpiper
30. Solitary Sandpiper
31. Greater Yellowlegs
32. Lesser Yellowlegs
33. Least Sandpiper
34. Semipalmated Sandpiper
35. Semipalmated Plover
36. Grey Plover
37. Shiny Cowbird
38. Pigeon
Went there in 2001 (landed back at Gatwick on 9/11). Wasn’t a birder then but maybe that was just as well! I preferred the rugged Atlantic east coast best - not as touristy. Great fish fry at Oistins.
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