Arjan's Biggest Year
In 2016 I will attempt the ultimate in global birding, to break the world record in birdwatching, this involves observing more than 6000 species in a single year!
Like my predecessor Noah Strycker I will count heard-only birds, but I will differentiate between heard-only- and seen species to make sure my list stays comparable.
During my 'Biggest Year' I will raise money for the groundbreaking Birdlife Preventing Extinctions Programme in a collaboration with Vogelbescherming Nederland and the Dutch Birding Association. This programme aims to prevent the extinction of all globally threatened bird species by applying an active, innovative and highly effective methodology.
Arjan's Biggest Year is supported by:
January 9-14
15 januari 2016 · Arjan Dwarshuis · 6148 × bekeken
January 9th SWEEPING SULTANPUR
The gods were on our side as we made our way from Colombo via Mumbai to Delhi (India), no delays, a smooth connection by bus from Mumbai international to Mumbai domestic airport and clear skies with little mist as we arrived - with very little sleep that is - around 5 AM in a nocturnal Delhi.
We were greeted by the Wild World India team at the airport, picked up our friend Sander Smit from his hotel and headed straight for Sultanpur Reserve, where we arrived just before the gates opened at 7 AM, isn't that perfect timing?!
Our guide Sanjay Sharma proved himself as one of the more knowledgeable local guides I've ever birded with and flawlessly he picked out every call, identified wagtails to subspecies level and made no mistakes identifying Aquila eagles from different age-groups. It was a real pleasure birding with the guy and over the course of the day we saw no less than 133 species of which more than 50 were new for the Biggest Year List.
Sultanpur NP is magnificent and literally packed with waterfowl, thousands of ducks, painted storks, cormorants and egrets made for quite the spectacle! Highlights inside the only 1.5 km2 large reserve were nesting Black-necked Stork, Eastern Imperial Eagle, White-tailed Lapwings, an adult Greater Spotted Eagle, Besra, a smart Moustached Warbler, the rare Brook's Leaf Warbler and the range restricted Sind Sparrow.
After lunch we headed into the countryside where birding proved just as productive. 4 Sarus Cranes, Steppe- and Indian Spotted Eagle, Red-naped Ibis and many larks, pipits, wheatears and other arid-country species were added in quick succession.
After this great day we were dropped off at Delhi Railway Station for our night-train to Ramnagar. I popped in a sleeping pill, locked my bag to one of my legs and took a well-deserved 6 hour nap...
Black-necked Stork Ephippiorhynchus asiaticus (Max van Waasdijk)
Red-naped Ibis Pseudibis papillosa (Max van Waasdijk)
Sarus Crane Grus antigone (Max van Waasdijk)
Sind Sparrow Passer pyrrhonotus (Max van Waasdijk)
January 10th FINDING MOMENTUM
We were picked up from Ramnagar train station at 5 AM and after we'd dropped off our luggage and had a chai at The Denn resort - a scenic place overlooking the Kosi River - we were off birding in the Corbett buffer zone with the best birder the region has to offer, Hari Lama.
As expected our first day in the Himalayan foothills was big, but we were not expecting this madness. New birds kept pouring in and among them were such mouth-watering species as Nepal Wren-babbler, Long-billed thrush, Little Forktail and Chestnut-headed- and Grey-bellied Tesia. Another great sighting was a wild Asian Elephant dust-bathing on the dry riverbed below us. You could see local villagers washing and bathing several hundred meters downriver and it wasn't hard to understand that sometimes these situations lead to conflict.
After lunch Lama took us to a stakeout for Ibisbill, one of the absolute most-wanted species for Sander and Max who had never seen it before. It took some time, but eventually we found this Holy Grail feeding 20 meters away from us.
In a euphoric state we walked back to the van when suddenly a male Himalayan Rubythroat popped out from under a bush, what a fantastic ending to a huge day and another 62 species could be added to the grand end total.
Ibisbill Ibidorhyncha struthersii (Max van Waasdijk)
Black-bellied Tern Sterna acuticauda (Max van Waasdijk)
Long-billed Thrush Zoothera monticola (Max van Waasdijk)
January 11th GOING UP
We started the day off with a dip, Tawny Fish Owl. The stakeout where I'd seen this huge owl 10 years back failed to deliver and unfortunately for Max and Sander we needed to head towards Pangot so we would arrive there in time for the afternoon session.
As we birded our way up into the Himalayan foothills almost every feeding flock we encountered contained new species and by the time we arrived at the very scenic Mountain Quail lodge we had added more than thirty new ones to the grand end total.
We had arrived at the haunt of my nemesis bird, the very rare and enigmatic Cheer Pheasant. I have missed this species twice, once at this very same location 10 years ago and once during a tracking in Nepal, so naturally tension was gradually building up in my system, but I had to wait for the next morning to even the score...
For the afternoon session Lama decided that we should take a walk through one of the small villages near Pangot. The system of fields end hedges makes ideal habitat for buntings, finches and other small seed-eaters. Unfortunately this habitat has been much degraded in comparison with a decade ago and Lama explained that the back than rather common Black-throated Accentor had almost disappeared from the area as a result of landscape-clearing for the construction of resorts, subsequently we could only find the - very smart looking - Rufous-breasted Accentor. As it looks now this still peaceful and quiet part of India will be flooded with tourist in the very near future, a sad thought indeed...
Dusk had already set in when we had the finest sighting of the day, a magnificent Brown Wood Owl that was being mobbed by a Large-tailed Nightjar!
After dinner we tucked in for a very cold night and dreamed of Cheer Pheasants creeping down a grassy Himalayan slope...
Himalayas (Max van Waasdijk)
January 12th CHEER PHEASANTASTIC
At 6:30 AM we drove up to the Cheer Pheasant-site, an area with steep grassy hillsides with stunning views of distant snow covered Himalayan peaks. An iconic setting for an iconic bird.
As the sun slowly rose over the mountains we began to scan the hillsides for Pheasants, but after an hour of meticulous scoping there was still no sign of any Cheer. We were starting to get worried, would we succeed or would we drive down into the lowlands empty handed? We had only one shot at the beast since we were doing a normally 14-day itinerary in just 6 days...
After another hour of waiting and a detour that produced a small flock of the uncommon Brown Bullfinch, Sander and I wandered a bit down the road when suddenly a bizarre and very loud call - unlike anything I'd ever heard - echoed across the mountains. We figured that a sound so bizarre could only fit a mega-bird and surely Max and Lama - who stood 150 meters away - were frantically pointing at the hillside above us.
And there it was, the undisputed king of this part of the Himalayas, the Cheer Pheasant! Moments later we watched the Pheasant through the scope as it crept down the hillside, exactly as in our dreams the night before. What a sighting and definitely the highlight of my Biggest Year so far.
After rounding-up the last of the targets - Upland Pipit, Pink-browed Rosefinch and Yellow-breasted Greenfinch - and dipping on Koklass Pheasant we said goodbye to Lama and headed for Keoladeo NP, a gruesome 12 hour drive through the most hectic traffic out there. On the Indian roads there are no rules and there is only chaos and as the sun set and dense mist formed over the countryside we braced ourselves for a horror night on the road...
Cheer Pheasant Catreus wallichii (Max van Waasdijk)
Upland Pipit Anthus sylvanus (Max van Waasdijk)
Red-billed Magpie Urocissa erythroryncha (Max van Waasdijk)
January 13th DELHI-BELLY VS WHITE-BELLIED
We survived the night on the road, but since we'd arrived about 1 in the morning and last nights' diner had caused some major disturbance in my stomach, I was feeling a little wobbly this morning to say the least. Luckily we were in the very capable hands of Ikrar Bablu Khan (babluknp06@gmail.com), Keoladeo's most knowledgeable bird guide.
Despite the fact that now and then I had to crawl behind a bush we were gradually picking up new species in this man-made oasis.
Keoladeo NP was constructed more than a 2 centuries ago to favor the Maharaja's need to go duck hunting. During the monsoon season the system of dikes filled up with water and created a heaven for wintering waterfowl and breeding herons and storks. On a 'good' day the Maharaja and his following shot more than 2000 ducks and geese...
Till the winter of 2002/2003 Keoladeo also formed the last remaining wintering grounds for the now extinct western population of Siberian Crane. During a long period of drought around that time the basins of Keoladeo stayed bone-dry all winter and these majestic birds were never to be seen again...
Nowadays water is pumped in all the way from the Chambal River and superficially all is back to normal with thousands of ducks and geese finding their way to Keoladeo every winter, but there are new threats lurking underwater... non-native African catfish recently found their way to the NP - their eggs were most probably transported on the legs of waterfowl from nearby fish farms - and these ferocious predators now feed on the hatchlings of Keoladeo's breeding waterfowl. In addition to this problem, the park management is fighting a constant battle with - also non-native - lilies that cloud the park's water...
But like I said birding was good and we managed fantastic views of northwestern Europe's most desired vagrant, the Siberian Rubythroat. Best however was a totally unexpected flock of 4 White-bellied Minivets, a rare and difficult to find nomadic species anywhere and a vagrant to the park!
We put an end to the day a little earlier than usual as I seriously needed to take some rest, so I would be my old self again next day, when we would visit one of India's most threatened ecosystems.
Siberian Rubythroat Luscinia calliope (Max van Waasdijk)
White-bellied Minivet Pericrocotus erythropygius (Max van Waasdijk)
January 14th THE LAST RIVER REFUGE
First on the agenda this morning was a highly desired open-country species, the Indian Courser. Bablu took us to an arid farmland area somewhere outside Bharatpur. While we were looking for coursers I kept myself busy by checking large flocks of Short-toed Larks with my scope, this proved a fruitful decision as I picked out two vagrant Bimaculated Larks. After Max took some record-shots we continued our Courser-quest and half an hour later we were looking at 3 of these most delicate looking waders.
After we checked out at the wonderful Birder's Inn - I can highly recommend this place to any visiting birder - we headed for the Chambal River. This river is one of the last remaining refuges for some of the subcontinent's most endangered animals, since many if not most of India's rivers are so severely polluted that only bacteria can survive in them.
Upon arrival we were shocked to see that even the shores of this sanctuary were littered with garbage and we started to wonder if there was any future for such wonderful creatures as Gharials, Gangetic River Dolphins and our target bird, the Indian Skimmer. Bablu told us that a couple of years back a monsoon-flood caused water of the Betwa River to flow into the Chambal, with this water came fish that had so much pollution in their system that after eating them, more than 1500 endangered Gharials died, an ecological tragedy. Thankfully conservationist of the WWF were able to restore their numbers via a captive breeding program and I am pleased to say that not all hope is lost for these awesome crocodilians.
During our boat ride we saw a large number of endangered animals, but from an avian perspective the definite highlight was a group of 25 Indian Skimmers. What an amazing experience and I sincerely hope that India's government manages to protect their last remaining river sanctuaries to safeguard these absolutely stunning birds.
Arjan Dwarshuis
Check out Arjan's species list and tweets HERE
Indian Courser Cursorius coromandelicus (Max van Waasdijk)
Indian Skimmer Rynchops albicollis (Max van Waasdijk)
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