Birds identified: 41 species Text: Hazel van Rooyen
Attendees: Stan & Val Culley, Stanley & Asothie Gengan, Graham & Sue Salthouse, Danie & Bella du Toit, Doug & Angie Butcher, Margaret Jones, Rob Eccles & Hanlie Kloppers, Louis & Pat Fourie, Bob & Hazel van Rooyen
Mocking Cliff Chat (HvR) |
After a week of lovely sunshine and clear skies, Sunday dawned overcast but it was quite pleasant for walking and stayed dry until after our braai when it started to mizzle just as we were leaving. The flowers were lovely as usual, with some different species flowering at their peak from our last visit, although not at their most sparkly in the misty atmosphere. The Burchellia bubalina (Wild Pomegranate) shrubs around the picnic sight were just coming into flower.
Burchellia bulbina (HvR) |
Lazy Cisticola (HvR) |
Members setting out (HvR) |
Through the flowers (HvR) |
On arrival, Amethyst and Greater Double-collared Sunbirds were very active in the Strelitzias and a female Mocking Cliff Chat guarded her territory on the rocky outcrop. A Lazy Cisticola was also very vocal amongst the rocks.
Berkheya speciosa (HvR) |
Ox-eye Daisy (HvR) |
Our first walk produced plenty of Bronze Mannikins, African Stonechats, Fan-tailed and Red-collared Widowbirds. We also disturbed Yellow-throated Longclawsamongst the grassland. A Burchell’s Coucal called in the distance. At the bottom of the field half our group returned via the main path seeing Black-bellied Starling, Black-collared Barbet and Black Saw-wing. The other half took the stepping stones over the brook and up the other side, hoping we didn’t encounter a Black Mamba seen on a previous occasion. Up here we saw quite a few Cape Canaries and after following the gorge for a while, we returned via the same route.
Eriosema umthamvunens (Brown Bonnets) (HvR) |
Helichrysum & Aster (HvR) |
Scilla (HvR) |
(HvR) |
Cape Canary (HvR) |
At the picnic site everyone was keen to tell me the Gurney’s Sugarbird had been seen but had now flown off. However, as soon as I sat down for coffee a loud yell from Stan told me it had returned and eventually I managed to get a photo.
Gurney's Sugarbird (Stan Culley) |
Gurney's Sugarbird (HvR) |
After breakfast our meanderings took us down the other side of the valley and here some flowers were a little more advanced.
Another breath-taking view (Stan Culley) |
Red-collared Widowbird (Stan Culley) |
Red-collared Widowbird (HvR) |
More widowbirds were in evidence, perching on the odd dead stick still standing from last summer. Spurwing Geese and Crowned Hornbillsflew overhead and someone heard a Crowned Eagle.
How much further! (HvR) |
Oribi (HvR) |
We surprised some Oribi buck in the longer grass which sprinted out of sight. On reaching a steep path tumbling down the gorge we decided we should retrace our steps and we plodded back up the hillside.
Stan had stayed at the picnic site and seen African Green Pigeon, African Palm Swift, Lesser Honeyguide and Yellow-fronted Canary.
African Green-Pigeon (Stan Culley) |
General opinions were that the flowers were better than our previous visit, although had the sun been shining the helichrysums would have opened up. Everyone enjoyed the morning’s birding and we finished up with a braai as usual.
Barbet, Black-collared Bulbul, Dark-capped Canary, Brimstone Canary, Cape Canary, Yellow-fronted Chat, Mocking Cliff Cisticola, Croaking Cisticola, Lazy Coucall, Burchell’s Dove, Cape Turtle Dove, Red-eyed Dove Drongo, Fork-tailed Eagle, African Crowned Goose, Egyptian | Goose, Spurwing Honeyguide, Lesser Hornbill, Crowned Hornbill, Trumpeter Longclaw, Yellow-throated Mannikin, Bronze Neddicky Oriole, Black-headed Pigeon, African Green Raven, White-necked Saw-wing, Black Seed-eater, Streaky-headed Spurfowl, Natal Starling, Black-bellied | Stonechat, African Sugarbird, Gurney’s Sunbird, Amethyst Sunbird, Greater Double-collared Sunbird, Olive Swallow, Lesser-striped Swift, African Palm Waxbill, Swee Weaver, Cape Weaver, Spectacled White-eye, Cape Widowbird, Fan-tailed Widowbird, Red-collared |
Photos property of photographer
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