Day
4
I birded both sides of the river from the
road at first light. The east side was better, with lots of White-eyes and Collared Finchbills, and finally Morrison’s Fulvetta. I had in fact seen them before but had
consistently misidentified them! There were also two Taiwan Barbets closer to the village and a Rufous-browed Babbler. The other side had a large number of Himalayan Black Bulbul, and good views of a troop of Formosan Macaques. I
also added White and Grey Wagtail on the road, and Large-billed
Crows were numerous. Today I was definitely keeping to time no matter what,
and so carried on down to Taroko having got the bird I needed.
Morrison's Fulvetta |
Grey Wagtail |
At Tianxiang I stopped to look at a bird that had
been perched in the middle of the road at the exit from a tunnel, and in
looking for it (it was a female Plumbeous
Redstart) I chanced upon my first Taiwan Whistling Thrush. It was
enormous, I hadn’t appreciated from the field guide how large they are. Dead
pleased with this, another critical endemic, my next roadside stop produced the
hoped-for Styan’s Bulbul, as well as
the first White-bellied Erpornis,
which is another potential split one day. There were also some bulbuls that may have been hybrids
between Styan’s and Chinese (Light-vented); their ranges overlap here.
Taiwan Whistling Thrush |
I then drove through the gorge which was breathtaking. Unbelievable in fact. Everywhere I stopped was a magnificent view, generally accompanied by a singing Plumbeous Redstart – I think I saw eight in Taroko in the space of two hours. One of my first versions of my itinerary had missed this area out on the basis that there was almost a total crossover of species between Daxueshan and Wushe-Wuling, and had Daxueshan been more productive I might never have come this way and seen this. I was glad that I had.
At Bulouwan Service Centre I concentrated on
the lower and upper Terrace trails. The lower had the most birds, including
some mixed flocks which contained Arctic
Warbler, Black-naped Monarch, Taiwan Yuhina and White-bellied
Erpornis. Yet another Taiwan Whistling Thrush called from down the slope. The upper meanwhile had at least
four Taiwan Barbets feeding in a fruiting tree, and a nice flock of Taiwan Sibia. Back in the car park I tracked down a calling Grey–capped Pygmy Woodpecker in with a
flock of Varied and Green-backed Tits. There were also
plenty of White Wagtails and Pacific Swallows cruised overhead. This
was a place I should have devoted more time to, but I simply couldn’t – Malayan Night Heron and Taiwan Blue Magpie
were important birds to get and I had less than a day to go. Reluctantly I
drove down to the coast road and headed north towards Taipei.
Taiwan Barbet |
Black-naped Monarch |
Daurian Redstart |
The journey as far as Yilan took forever,
more than three hours. There were an inordinate number of works traffic lights
and single file traffic. There is a huge construction program underway, which
looks to be to do with drilling a series of huge tunnels down the east coast to
replace large parts of the winding coast road that I was on. When complete it
should make the east coast route very much faster but at the time of writing it
made it a lot slower. Still, the scenery was nice, and at some point I saw a Crested Serpent Eagle cruising around.
I broke the journey at Yilan, arriving at
around 1pm rather than midday as I had hoped. Drastic measures and all that,
but this meant my time at the Lizejian Wetland complex was restricted to an
hour. This was enough to add quite a few new birds to the trip list, but not to
fully explore the area. It was a good site for raptors, with Chinese Sparrowhawk, Osprey and
a hovering Black-winged Kite. There
were stacks of Egret and I amused
myself by trying to ID Intermediate Egret without referencing other Egrets. This was a lot harder than I
thought, in the end I did have to find one standing next to a Great White Egret to be
absolutely certain. Then again, je ne regrette rien…. I found several Marsh Sandpipers, flushed a Yellow
Bittern from one of the many bunds
that separated the small flooded fields, and a solitary Whiskered Tern fished
near the main bridge.
Great White and Intermediate Egrets |
Eastern Spot-billed Duck |
In the end I managed to drag myself away after an
hour and a quarter and made for the Taipei Botanical Garden which I reached by
about half past three. I found a parking spot directly next to the entrance
which was extremely fortunate. I wasn’t at that stage quite sure what the
ticketing arrangements were, but the birds came first and I resolved to deal
with it later. In short just find a space, you can pay at your convenience. I
didn’t have the field guide, so I used the Collins App to show people a photo of
a Black-crowned Night Heron, hoping
it was close enough. One of them dutifully led me to….a Black-crowned Night Heron. Doh! In the end it did not take long to
find a Malayan Night Heron myself in
the northern part of the garden, just pottering around in a flowerbed –
remarkable! I took a few photos and then headed back to the car – for a moment
my heart was in my mouth as there was a ticket on the windscreen but I soon
worked it out, you just take it to a 7-11 and pay it there. It appeared to be
50 TWD per hour.
Malayan Night Heron |
I then drove through very busy traffic to
Huajiangyanya Natural Park, also known as the Tapiei Geese Protected Area. I
had found this area on eBird and it looked very good. I parked the car right
next to the site, and also right next to…another Malayan Night Heron, this time a juvenile bird, wandering across
the grass next to a busy street without a care in the world! There seemed to a
twitch going on, as I could see a row of birdwatchers and tripods a short
distance away. No doubt it would prove to be some kind of European dross that I
had zero interest in! I was spot on as it happened, as they were all looking at
a Eurasian Spoonbill! I seem to have
form with this species in the wrong location, I found one on Barbados once. I
would have much preferred it to be a Black-faced
Spoonbill, but at least I had seen that species before in Hong Kong.
Anyway, all the locals were rather excited, and one of them also pointed out
another rarity to me, a Bean Goose. Good birding, with lots of Waders, Egrets and Mynas in some
excellent habitat, but the only new birds beyond the ‘rarities’ that I could
add were Black-collared Starling and
White-breasted Waterhen.
That concluded my birding for the day. With a
flight at about 2pm the following day, the only endemic species that I could
still hope for around Taipei was the Taiwan
Blue Magpie which was most likely around the village of Wulai, which is a
hot-springs and spa destination about half an hour south of central Taipei in
the foothills. I drove there through a very lively Taipei district called
Wanhua, and had an excellent meal about half way there. The hotels were a
little more expensive in Wulai than I had hoped, but I bargained the Karuizawa
down to 2000 TWD which is about £50 when I couldn’t pay by credit card as their
machine was broken. The parking attendants were on point, getting a ticket on
my car within ten minutes, and as it was a “per day” rate, another at an
impressive 19 minutes past midnight that I discovered the following morning!
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