I travelled alone via Spain, less convenient perhaps but more comfortable, and as a bonus I got an evening eating tapas and a morning birding in Madrid. I would be the only person to see Sardinian Warbler on the trip. I arrived in Bogota a little earlier than the rest of the team, and was met by the father and brother of a Colombian colleague of mine, concerned that I might head out of the wrong door and be gobbled up. These kind people passed me on to Alejandro, our guide for the week, who was waiting at the hotel I had booked for the few hours I was here. I should have just gone to a bar or something, but I guess a few hours sleep were worthwhile at 2500m altitude.
The guys arrived direct from London right on time, and now five we flew the short hop to Medellin on the western side of the central cordillera. The Andes split into three fingers in Colombia, separated east to west by the Magdalena and Cauca valleys. Our trip was centered around the central and western branches, with time on three difference slopes each with different aviafauna. It had been a long time coming and to say we were keen was an understatement.
I would normally write a post about logistics etc, but that is only really meaningful when I have done all the organising. This was a guided trip, and as such the itinerary and logistics were all sorted out by Manakin Tours working with Dave to understand what we wanted to see. Antpittas apparently. My contribution was paying Dave my share of the bill when the time came, an incredible luxury. I could get used to this!
Nonetheless here is a map of where we went and a rough outline of the days. This was an Andean speciality trip, with almost all birding at high altitude in cloud forest and rainforest habitat on the western and eastern slopes of the central and western cordilleras. My experience of birding in South America is pretty minimal - Costa Rica in 2018 and a wedding in Argentina in 2008. There would be little cross-over and I had high hopes of seeing many many new birds.
Itinerary
Day 2: Alto de Ventanas. Antpittas.
Reading this from the Gambia (birding trip - 132 species in 3.5 days so far) , and you are so right that exotic birding is the way forward.
ReplyDeleteReturning to the local patch is hard going.
DeleteYour brain starts putting Neo Tropical stuff in the bushes in front of you on local walks back home. It can very very cruel.
ReplyDeleteI am beginning to get over it. New beginnings in 2023 is helping.
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