With our alarms jolting us
awake at an ungodly hour early in the morning, bleary eyed and groggy we
gathered our gear and made the journey over to the eastern side of the island,
arriving at our first destination of the Cape Greco headland just after first
light.
|
The stunning blue waters of Cape Greco headland |
Jutting out in to the Mediterranean
Sea and holding the title of the most easterly point of Greek Cyprus (also the
closest point to the migration mecca of Israel), Cape Greco is a migrant
hotspot, well known for its impressive falls of migrant birds and rarities
during the spring months. The coastal scrub that adorns the hillside holds many
short staying passage migrants, and it was here that we were hoping to connect
with the Ruppell’s Warblers that had so far eluded us during the trip –
especially as counts of up to 18 males had been logged here just a couple of
weeks prior.
|
The picturesque Agioi Anargyroi Chapel |
Parking up beside Agioi
Anargyroi chapel, we set to work exploring the nearby scrub, a pair of Cyprus
Warblers giving away their location with their constant harsh chakking calls as
several Chiffchaffs flitted through the gorse below.
|
Cyprus Warbler |
The scratchy song of a
male Sardinian Warbler filled the air and it wasn’t long before we had our
first Masked Shrike of the trip, an impressive adult perched on one of the
small pines, making several sallying flights out for small insect and reptile
prey.
|
Masked Shrike - Having only seen a juvenile previously (at Spurn in Yorkshire) it was nice to finally connect with an adult bird |
Walking up the slope to the
viewpoint at the top of the hill resulted in an all too brief perched
Cretzchmar’s Bunting before it flushed out of sight, while almost every other
bush seemed to hold a skulking Nightingale or Lesser Whitethroat lurking unobtrusively
within.
Sadly however, after a few
hours spent searching we drew a blank on the Ruppell’s front once more, and
after a quick stop at the chapel we headed across to the fields next to the
sea, a single female Cyprus Pied Wheatear at close range all we could unearth for our
efforts.
Acquiring some intel from local
birders at the Cape Greco Visitor Centre that the nearby pines had held some
interesting migrants that morning, we decided to give it a shot, hoping to
relocate the Semi-collared Flycatcher and female Ruppell’s that someone else had
seen there that morning.
Sadly, despite us and another
birder looking, the pines were hopelessly deserted by the time we’d got there,
and after an intense search only a handful of Chiffchaffs, Blackcaps and a
female Cyprus Warbler were all we unearthed (as well as a new hatred for pines).
The adjoining scrubland revealed a pair of nesting Spectacled Warblers that we
left in peace, while a familiar bubbling call directly overhead revealed a
flock of Bee-eaters making landfall fresh in off the sea (sadly no Blue-cheeked
amongst them).
With Cape Greco itself being
unusually quiet, we cut our losses and headed over to the next site of the day,
Ayia Napa Sewage Works. Again, with a depressing pattern emerging, what is normally
billed as a great site for migrants was exceptionally quiet during our visit,
with just the usual Blackcaps, Chiffchaffs and Willow Warblers feeding amongst
the pollen. Thankfully, our journey to the eastern side of Cyprus hadn’t been
in vain, as a single Eastern Bonelli’s Warbler flitting in the willows at the
side of the track salvaged what had been an entirely unsuccessful morning up
until this point, the green-tinted tertials and silky white underparts
differing from the assorted Chiffchaffs.
At this point the road became
decidedly more and more potholed, and it was with careful navigation that Alex manoeuvred
the hire car to the end of the track unscathed. Rather less fortunate was the
fact we had come to an abrupt dead end, the only route leading back to the exit
road passing through the private and gated water treatment works. With a staff
member having spotted us and denied all entry, we were forced to make a return
drive the way we came, navigating the deep pot holes and steep water channels
once more, stopping to scope several Ferruginous Ducks and Black-necked Grebes
bobbing on the sewage works pools.
|
The gravel track surrounding the sewage works |
With the afternoon pressing on
we headed to our final site of the day – Oroklini Lake, a fantastic reserve
just north of Larnaca. Before we’d even arrived several Spur-winged Plovers showed
off at the side of the road (Oroklini Lake is a hotspot for this species),
while several egrets powered overhead. Checking out the hide overlooking one of
the pools revealed several more Spur-winged Plovers roosting in the reeds,
while a small handful of Black-winged Stilts gingerly picked their way through
the mud.
Scanning the water soon
resulted in several new ducks for the trip with Red-crested Pochard, Garganey,
Pintail, Teal and Shoveler all in attendance, while a distant Black Francolin
belted out its rasping call behind us. Scanning the fields, Alex somehow
managed to pick it out, stood on a low stone wall in the distance and enabling
the briefest of record shots!
|
Black Fancolin - a distant and blurry record shot!! |
With the Francolin staying put and looking like
it was next to the main road, we headed off in that direction in an attempt to
secure better views, but upon reaching the field in question it appeared to
have gone, just a lone Chukar roaming through the stubble as consolation.
|
Chukar |
|
Xrisosotiros Akanthous church near Oroklini |
A
pair of extremely showy Spur-winged Plovers right next to the road also gave
our cameras a workout providing our best views of the trip, but with no further
birds of note from the second hide we decided to make the long journey back to
Paphos, just one new bird to show for our excursion.
|
Spur-winged Plover |
Never the less the Eastern
Bonelli’s transpired to be the only individual we saw all trip, and despite the
lack of our target birds during our visit, Cape Greco headland has huge
potential to reveal some truly great birds given persistent coverage during
peak migration times.
No comments:
Post a Comment