Friday, April 29, 2011

Livestock Guardian Dogs in Texas




My daughter and her family recently took my wife and me on a tour of an all natural sustainable farm in Taylor, Texas. http://www.freshpasturefarm.com/
The purpose was to take a look at the livestock they raise and how they were all naturally fed and then processed for food. My family are big meat eaters and have decided to try and eat more natural meats with less hormones, drugs and chemicals used in raising them. This will result in healthier food as we are what we eat and apparently I must have consumed some pretty bad stuff in the past. That is all well and good but not what I really got out of the tour. Being an animal person I immediately took to the Livestock Guardian Dogs (LGDs) on the place. I found out that the dogs on the farm protect the poultry, goats and other animals from predators. Not only from predators like coyotes, bobcats, coons, feral dogs, feral cats and skunks but also from hawks and owls. Since I am a falconer it simply amazed me that those dogs could protect fields or fenced paddocks of free roaming baby goats, lambs and turkey poults along with broiler and layer chickens from raptors that attack from the air. The proof was that the number of losses to raptors had become non-existent since the farm obtained the Great Pyrenees LGDs. Anyway I spent most of my time walking around with one of the very large white Great Pyrenees and became infatuated with the animal and the concept of livestock guardian dogs. This concept is quite different from trying to eliminate a predator after it has killed livestock. It occurred to me that proper predator control along with the use of LGDs would work quite well in our part of Texas.

When I returned home I spent some time on the World Wide Web and came across many breeds that are used in this capacity. I did a little research and found a book that I will recommend if you are interested in learning about using LGDs and other livestock guardian animals like donkeys and llamas. Livestock Guardians by Janet Vorwald Dohner is a very informative read. Most of these breeds originated in European and Mediterranean countries. Some came from high mountainous areas and some from deserts. Most of them came from countries where shepherds took their flocks to different areas to graze the fresh grasses and they were bred to defend flocks of sheep and goats from predators such as bears, lions, wolves and even eagles. Some breeds live with the livestock they guard 24 hours a day 365 days a year while others live with the flocks for a certain season, then live with the shepherds and their families the rest of the year. Since we are planning to move to the country in the future and raise Boer goats, grass fed beef and possibly free range chickens. I decided to put a lot more study into breeds along with the pluses and minuses of each. There are a few breeds I have come to believe will fit into our future and so I am watching for a deal on the proper pup. The following are the breeds I have decided would possibly fill our needs.



Maremma



Great Pyrenees




Akbash


Anatolian


Kuvasz




I am hoping that some of you out there that know about Livestock Guardian Dogs would post some of your stories or advice on LGDs in the comments below. If you run across a good deal on a pup of any of these breeds or perhaps one needing a good home in the Central Texas area please send me an email and let me know about them.
Email WildEd
You can email me anytime by clicking on the [Email Wild Ed] just under my picture in the top left hand section of this page. Keep an eye out, Wild Ed

Monday, April 25, 2011

Texan's Successful First Bow Hunt for Elk








I have a Dentist that has become a friend through his practice. He and his staff saw me through some difficult times with a couple of root canals and crowns. They have become more or less extended family. Most of my family and many friends have been treated by Doc and his staff, we recommend them to anyone we know needing dental care. If you live in the Round Rock, Texas area you should check them out too. www.patriot-dental.com



This article is not about Dentistry, it is about archery hunting for elk and beginner's luck. Dr. Ducote or Drew went on his first bowhunt for elk this last year and I kind of armchair coached him on the bowhunting part. Anyhow Doc gets set up with a bow, starts practicing with his bow, hires a guide and takes his father with him on an elk hunt. I think I will let Drew tell the rest of the story, but I will throw in that the first elk called in was a gollywhopper and being the good son Drew lets his dad fling the first arrow. It unfortunately was flung right over the top of the big bull elk, such are the stories of first time elk hunts. Here is the rest of the story straight from the horse’s mouth, or maybe I should say from the Doc’s mouth. Wild Ed








THE HUNT

When: September 25th 2010

Where: CedarEdge Colorado

First morning of the first day of a 5 day guided archery hunt. My FIRST bow hunt! First animal I've ever taken with a bow!
The night before was cloudy which blocked the moon and from what the guides told my Dad and I; would make for a good morning hunt.
During the rut the elk will become almost nocturnal if given enough evening moonlight.

That morning we woke to a light drizzle and overcast skies. The perfect elk bowhunting weather.

The experience was nothing like hunting whitetail as the technique was to listen for bugling and sprint off in the direction of the noise.
After an hour ride in a 6 wheel ATV followed by an hour hike up to 11000ft we arrived at first light for what turned out to be a thrilling morning.

We immediately heard some aggressive bugling (which to my untrained ears sounded like it was miles away). We took off following the guide through thick brush trying to protect our bows before our face and arms. My Dad and I chose to hunt together with one guide to maximize the experience and be there to witness should either of us harvest an animal.

I was completely puzzled that we did not have to be quiet like hunting most game. The guide explained that during the elk rut the bulls are rather noisy and as long as we don't speak and are not scented they will just assume it's another bull encroaching on their territory. It can actually play to our advantage.

We suddenly came to a small clearing with knee high grass and low hanging cedars.

Our extraordinary guide also named Ed (in his late 50's who kicked our butt up and down the hill carrying a 30lb pack with a first aid kit, field dressing equipment and emergency gear) told me to move up wind 50 yards and "get ready" I did as instructed at which point he proceeded to let out all manner of bugles and cow calls. He was a master with those tubes! Sure enough here came from my right what looked to me like the largest elk on the planet. I pulled back to full draw using my newly broken in Bowtech Destroyer 350 set to 60lb draw weight. Thanks to Double G archery in Georgetown for answering my rookie questions and getting me set up with the right gear for the hunt.

So now I was locked at full draw in a semi-squat with the bull approaching broadside at 30 yards. It seemed like an easy shot if I could just stand enough to ensure my arrow did not deflect off a branch at my current eye level. Just then while trying to decide my next move with my arm starting to quiver, he turned and stared right at me. Seemingly puzzled and learning that he was a young bull, he tried to figure out what I was - with no scent attached to my camouflaged silhouette. It seemed to drag on for minutes with me trying to be still and him trying to decide whether to charge or run away. He turned his head for a split second in the direction of Ed (my guide) and my dad who were standing together watching the entire scene unfold. This was my chance! I stood and let the 2 blade Rage mechanical broadhead sail. Double lunged the bull - perfect shot! He turned and ran over a small hill where he laid to rest not more than 200 yards from the point of impact.

Needless to say I was extremely lucky but also well prepared.. With the success rate around 6% for archery bulls in this unit, I spent many hours conditioning and practicing with my bow so when the moment presented itself I would be ready. The remaining time we hiked 8-10miles per day in search of a legal bull for my dad Kent. He did not connect this trip but we have booked our return for next September.

I must give special thanks to Wild Ed for encouraging me to pick up the bow and enjoy the outdoors. I had some reservation about switching from a rifle to bow but he told me there was nothing like it and he was right! I left my rifle in the case the rest of the season and took my bow with me to the deer lease. The challenge is great but the reward is too.

Best of Luck

- Dr. Drew


Dr. Andrew Ducote
Patriot Dental P.C.
503 E. Palm Valley Blvd
Round Rock, TX 78664
(512)244-3991
http://www.patriot-dental.com/








Selous Game Reserve: April 22-24, 2011

The long rains began in earnest as soon as I returned from my trip to the Eastern Usambara Mountains, and the unpaved roads in Dar es Salaam quickly deteriorated. My gentle commute to work by bicycle became a mud bath, and while driving was cleaner it was hardly any easier as my car bounced along painfully through flooded potholes. Originally, I had hoped to fly to a remote park or reserve in Tanzania for the Easter holiday weekend, but many of the landing strips were closed for the rainy season, and the remainder of flights to Arusha, Pemba, and Mwanza were already sold out. Even accommodation at nearby Mikumi, Sadaani, and Udzwunga National Parks were booked, which didn’t leave me with many palatable options. I could take the long highway to Ruaha Naional Park (12 hours), brave the dirt road to Selous Game Reserve (7 hours), or hang out in Dar. Although I wanted to make the best of the short vacation, it was with considerable trepidation that I set off to Selous Game Reserve for five days, knowing that the road conditions would be formidable and the chances for good wildlife viewing slim.

I had made arrangements to stay at Selous Mbega Camp, which is located along the Rufiji River just outside the Mtemere Entrance Gate, asking the manager to reserve a particular park ranger named Apollo to accompany me on my game drives. Aimee and I had had a peaceful stay at the same camp in October, and Apollo had worked effectively with our student group while on walking safari for three days in February. During the latter trip I was impressed with how well he knew the birds of the reserve and had discussed the possibility of exploring the reserve with him further, focusing on finding bird species unique to the Miombo forests of southern Tanzania. Having a park ranger with me would also reduce the likelihood that I would get lost, stuck, or both and have to sleep in the reserve while waiting perhaps a day or longer for rescue. The setup certainly had potential, but the margin of error would be slim.

First, I had to complete the long drive from Dar, which proved wet, muddy, and treacherous in parts. The worst section was along the final three-hour stretch, where the road drops down into a floodplain and circumvents a bridge in a state of interminable repair. Here, groups of men from the village nearby were escorting the occasional vehicle across a two hundred meter stretch of mud and through a deep but narrow stream. As it hadn’t rained for a few days, the mud was relatively dry and I snaked through it without trouble, but I had to reflect a few minutes at the water’s edge before attempting to complete the passage. The water came up over the hood as I plunged the car blindly forward over a few thick boards that had been lined up underwater over the deep mud. A bit surprised I had made it across, I continued on into a powerful thunderstorm that persisted for over an hour, leaving the regular dips in the road overflowing with water.

With the feeling of having dodged a bullet, I slid across the mud into a parking spot at the camp and unwound over a late lunch. The river was swollen and flowing fast, and all the grassy islands that had harbored a variety of bird life in the dry season were now submerged. A boat safari would be pointless in these conditions, where as in the dry season it had been remarkably rewarding. While the woodland along the river was more verdant than before, I saw very few birds as I patrolled around the camp that afternoon, aside from a White-Browed Robin-Chat and a pair of Terrestrial Brownbuls. It was great to relax on my tent platform in the evening though, reading with the aid of a kerosene lantern and listening to the chatter of the Bush Babbies in the trees nearby. Even later that night as I listened to the rain in my tent, I was glad I had come and optimistic about exploring the reserve over the next few days.

Although the weather was clear and sunny in the morning, I felt terrible by the time I met Apollo at the entrance gate. I had already changed a tire that morning, and my left arm was swollen painfully from the hand all the way above my elbow thanks to the bites of a tsetse fly. My stomach was also reeling from the salad I had foolishly eaten at dinner the previous night. Explaining carefully to Apollo my hopes for the next few days and stating the birds for which I was searching, I agreed to drive to several different sites in the reserve, where we would explore on foot. After paying the entrance fee ($50 per person per 24 hours) and negotiating his price ($35 per day), we set off on a nearby circuit along the Rufiji River. The grass was high and green along the road, but we saw a variety of large game, including Greater Kudu, giraffe, elephant, as well as warthog and impala.

Stopping at a viewpoint above the river, we admired a large group of African Skimmers flying in v-formation low over the water. There was plenty of bird activity in the vegetation along the riverbank, including a group of wary White-Crested Helmet-Shrike and a single Bohm’s Bee-Eater. Red-Billed Quelea, Pin-Tailed Whydah, and Eastern Paradise Whydah males were all dazzling in their breeding plumage as they displayed in flight and on treetops. Along Lake Mzizmia we also found Water Thick-Knee, Scarlet-Chested Sunbird, and Brown-Hooded Kingfisher, all good birds but ones I’ve also seen in Dar. The majority of our time was spent navigating through difficult stretches on the road, as Apollo would scout a path for the car through the saturated black-cotton soil. After half a dozen risky but successful dashes through the mud, we finally got stuck only a few meters from the main road. Fortunately, a Land Rover soon passed by and within thirty minutes we were back on the road feeling fortunate.

In hindsight, I can see that I should have asserted myself at this point, scaling back on our risky driving and focusing more on watching birds. Apollo had his own ideas though, and took us deep into the reserve at a site he claimed was good for Purple-Crested Turaco. Three hours later and at least five kilometers off the main road we finally arrived at a deserted camp along Lake Manze. The site was indeed good for birding; however, it was already late afternoon and the western sky was darkening with clouds. I tried to enjoy myself for a while, watching a pair of Green Wood-Hoopoes scour over a massive Baobab tree, but I had a growing sense of dread. I noted Brown-Breasted Barbet, Chin-Spot Batis, Green-Winged Pytilia, Collared Palm-Thrush, and Village Indigobird as we walked slowly through the ruins of the camp. Whenever we were on foot Apollo always took his rifle, and he cautiously surveyed the environment before moving ahead, especially as we passed through closed areas.

His judgment turned significantly worse once we were back in the car as he guided us toward the main road, at one point directing me through a trackless field of tall grass. Driving into it, I knew we were headed for trouble, but he had successfully pushed me through dozens of muddy stretches so I just let go and followed his command. Within minutes we were bottomed out in a swampy patch of black-cotton soil, barefoot and up to our knees in mud as we tried to dig the car out with our hands. We had seen a total of five cars all day, and none of them had been off the main road, so we understood very clearly that we were going to spend the night in the car if we didn’t extricate ourselves within the next hour. After collecting stones and branches, desperately digging, and wildly shifting gears, we were back on track only to get stuck again five minutes later. Although we worked furiously, the car stubbornly slid back into the mud each time we almost had it back on track. It wasn’t until it was dark and had begun raining were we finally free.

Even this feeling proved to be illusory, as we headed back to the entrance gate over fifty kilometers away. The rain quickly drenched the main road, leaving it in a retched condition similar to the side roads, and we barely skidded through muddy sections with speed, not traction. As we careened recklessly through the night, we encountered hordes of birds and animals that seemed to be in an equally frenzied state. Large groups of impala dashed back and forth across the road, hundreds of thick-knees and nightjars flew up into the headlights at the last possible moment, and several massive hippopotamus raced at impossible speeds as they fled from the car on way to their feeding grounds. We even came within meters of a menacing Spotted Hyena that boldly stared us down as we passed. With the rain pouring down and the lightning flashing, the scene beyond the muddy windshield was terrifying, and the nightmare didn’t begin to subside until we reached the gate just before 10pm.

I finally made it back to camp that night, but not before getting the car stuck one last time, ten meters short of the parking area, where I simply left it. It had been a long and traumatizing day, and my confidence behind the wheel was deeply shaken. It’s not that I would have been that scared or uncomfortable sleeping in my car in the reserve; it’s that I would have rather spent the day observing birds than pushing my car to the limit. I appreciate taking the occasional risk and feeling adventurous, but I had learned that going on driving safari in the rainy season is only for the most fearless drivers and toughest vehicles. The other guests at the camp were still up gossiping about the road conditions and discussing how they were going to get back to Dar by Wednesday (it was only Saturday). Myself, I decided to leave the following day after hearing about the worsening situation at the bridge, where I had barely made it across in dry weather (the other alternative would be to drive twelve hours through the reserve to Morogoro). It would take four hours and six determined men to get my car through those two hundred meters of deep mud, and I wouldn’t arrive back in Dar until midnight, but I would need the remaining two days of vacation to recover from the physical and psychological wounds of the trip.

Notable birds seen: Hamerkop, Marabou Strok, Little Egret, Palm-Nut Vulture, African Fish Eagle, African White-Backed Vulture, Eastern Chanting-Goshawk, Tawny Eagle, Helmeted Guineafowl, Black-Bellied Bustard, Water Thick-Knee, White-Crowned Lapwing, Crowned Lapwing, Three-Banded Plover, African Skimmer, Speckled Mousebird, Brown-Hooded Kingfisher, Bohm’s Bee-Eater, Little Bee-Eater, White-Throated Bee-Eater, White-Fronted Bee-Eater, Blue-Cheeked Bee-Eater, Lilac-Breasted Roller, Green Wood-Hoopoe, African Hoopoe, Von der Decken’s Hornbill, Crowned Hornbill, Trumpeter Hornbill, Brown-Breasted Barbet, Crested Barbet, Nubian Woodpecker, African Pied Wagtail, White-Browed Robin-Chat, Thrush Nightingale, Spotted Morning-Thrush, Collared Palm-Thrush, Chin-Spot Batis, African Paradise Flycatcher, Terrestrial Brownbul, Purple-Banded Sunbird, Scarlet-Chested Sunbird, Black-Backed Puffback, White-Crested Helmet-Shrike, Yellow-Billed Oxpecker, White-Browed Sparrow-Weaver, African Golden Weaver, Red-Billed Quelea, Green-Winged Pytilia, Southern Cordon-Bleu, Red-Billed Fire-Finch, Eastern Paradise Whydah, Village Indigobird, Black-Winged Bishop, Pin-Tailed Whydah, African Golden-Breasted Bunting.

Monday, April 18, 2011

Texas Drought, Water, Fire and the Game Camera

My brother and I have kept the feed flowing at our place in Lampasas county because very little is available for the wildlife to eat. Due to the long time drought birds and other wildlife are having a real hard time making a living. My uncles each have acreage on either side of our place with available water. One has a well with a tank and float and the other has a stock pond which has never gone completely dry in my lifetime, but it is getting awful shallow. We decided to put out some small five gallon poultry waterers for the dove, turkeys and songbirds at the feeders. We are using these until we can design and build something better. We are working on a guzzler or large waterer to put out until we can have a well, cattle trough or stock pond put on our acreage. The following pictures show what a difference a little water makes at the feeders. If you can help feed and water the wildlife during this hard time please do so and be very careful with fire as the whole State is ready to burn away. Wild Ed














Thursday, April 14, 2011

Making the Plastic Bucket Poultry and Bird Waterer

The following pictorial is how to make a poultry, gamebird or songbird waterer from a plastic bucket, lid and oil pan. You can use a rubber pan or a larger planter saucer instead of an oil pan if you like. We use these not only for poultry waterers but place them inside our feed pens at the ranch so that quail, dove and songbirds can get a drink when they come to the feeders. Other small animals an even deer can drink from them. If you use them for other than poultry be sure an place a big rock on the bucket to keep varmints from turning them over and spilling out the water. My pan is 3 ¾ inches deep so I drilled two ½ inch holes in each side of the bucket 2 ½ inches down from the top of the bucket lid. This will allow the water to come out of the bucket when turned upside down in the pan and not let air in. Make sure the holes will not be higher than the sides of the pan you are using when the bucket sits upside down in the pan.



















Fill bucket until water reaches the holes you drilled.









Put lid on the bucket and turn upside down in the water pan. The water will run out into the pan until it reaches the level of the holes in the bucket. As the chickens drink water more will run out as needed.



























Sunday, April 10, 2011

Amani Nature Reserve: April 6-9, 2011

The Usambara Mountains in northeastern Tanzania posses the same type of biological diversity that I learned to appreciate while living in the Ecuadorian Andes. These two steep coastal ranges trap warm, humid air blowing off the Indian Ocean and receive several meters of rainfall annually. This climactic effect combined with different soil conditions in each range have produced impressive levels of plant and insect endemism, which support, of course, a wide variety of endemic bird species. Indeed, there are a number of species and races of birds named after the mountains themselves: Usambara Weaver, Usambara Alkalat, Usambara Hyliota, and Usambara Eagle-Owl. And there are a great many more bird species that are restricted to these montane forests and those of the greater Eastern Arc Mountains, which stretch far inland to Iringa. In terms of avian significance, visiting these mountains should be a top priority for birders; however, their remoteness and general lack of infrastructure combined with the powerful attraction of the country’s famous game parks, such as the Serengeti, have resulted in low levels of tourism. As individual reserves like Amani are dependent upon revenue to support their conservation efforts, there is still steady deforestation in the Usambaras despite their having been long recognized for biological diversity.

Indeed, this was my first trip to the Usambara Mountains, and I’m a dedicated birder who has lived in the country for almost a year. My colleague Cyrille and I had decided to spend our week-long vacation first at Tarangire National Park, a classic game park in northern Tanzania, and then at Amani Nature Reserve, a small forest reserve in the Eastern Usambaras (10,000 hectares in size with approximately 3,000 ha of undisturbed forest). I had made arrangements in advance to stay at Emau Hill Forest Camp and even printed out the directions off their website, but stupidly I didn’t study them carefully or consider how long it would really take for us to arrive from Tarangire. As a result, we didn’t show up until 10pm after having deposited the car in a muddy ditch a few hundred meters from the camp. Four hours of driving in the dark on a narrow, slippery dirt track up the mountains had left us a bit rattled, and it took Cyrille a while to realize that having made it so far was a real tribute to his steady nerves and driving acumen (naturally, he kept blaming himself for getting the car stuck). The camp itself looked beautiful in the starlight, as we enjoyed a few drinks and tucked into the vegetarian fare, and the tents were well constructed and comfortably equipped with beds and solar-powered lamps.

In the morning, the owner Stephen gathered a large workforce to dislodge the car and pull it back onto the road (see Cyrille's photograph of the endeavor above), while I waited around the camp for Martin Joho, who would be my private bird guide for the next two and a half days ($25 per day; 0786-108086; martinjoho2008@yahoo.com). There were some great birds to watch in the garden, including White-Eared Barbet, African Paradise Flycatcher, and Uluguru Violet-Backed Sunbird, so I didn’t mind the delay. Having worked as a field researcher and guide for many years, Martin has comprehensive knowledge of the birds of the region, and he works very effectively with English-speaking birders who are serious about tracking down the bird specialties of Amani Nature Reserve, of which there about twenty. Although he didn’t have audio equipment with him, he was able to attract birds with an impressive array of calls and sounds, and he organized our excursions efficiently so that we maximized our opportunities to see the more difficult birds, including the Long-Billed Tailorbird. In general, I was very happy with his guiding and would strongly recommend him to visiting birders who only have a few days to spend exploring the reserve.

We started off down the steep road that leads up to the camp, passing along clearings and forest edge. Quickly, we spotted a Fischer’s Turaco bounding up a tree, its beautiful plumage changing color as it passed through light and shade. Two Green Barbets were calling to each other from different fruiting trees, and an African Harrier-Hawk was busy probing into cavities in the tree branches with its long legs. Massive Silvery-Cheeked Hornbills were calling noisily from the canopy and flying loudly from tree to tree, no doubt dispersing seeds all over the place. In fact, the hornbills are in part responsible for the profusion of non-native tree species throughout the reserve, having gorged themselves on the fruit of exotic trees in the large botanical garden surrounding the research station. Noting a pair of African Crowned Eagles soaring overhead, we then moved on into the forest along a narrow trail. Within a few minutes we had tracked down a mixed flock, lead by a pair of Square-Tailed Drongos, and we were soon parsing the subtle differences between greenbul species, including Shelley’s, Cabanis’s, Yellow-Streaked, Little, Stripe-Cheeked, and Tiny Greenbulls. We also noted Moustached Green Tinkerbird, Black-Throated Wattle-Eye, Forest Batis, Dark-Backed Weaver, Yellow-Throated Wood-Warbler, Yellow White-Eye, and Uluguru Violet-Backed Sunbird.

After lunch we tried for the enigmatic Long-Billed Tailorbird, which is a small, endangered forest warbler with only a few hundred pairs remaining. As part of his research duties, Martin is responsible for tracking these birds and monitoring their behavior, and he regularly visits several territories in the area around the camp. Although their nesting habits have never been studied, the tailorbird appears to be related to the tailorbirds of Southeast Asia than the similar-looking apalis warblers of Africa. After a few different attempts at a territory behind the camp, we finally resorted to using playback on the following afternoon, which provoked the resident pair into immediate and aggressive defense of their territory. As the light was good, I decided to try for a few photographs, despite my damaged lens and the birds’ movement in the dense tangles blanketing the clearing. Although the photographs aren’t of high quality, they give a truer sense of the bird’s plumage than the field guide, which exaggerates the contrast in color between the upper and lower parts. Martin elaborated on the species further as we sat in the shade and reflected on our observations, sharing his understanding of the bird’s habits and habitat.

The following morning we visited the area around the research station, which is at about 950 meters above sea level. The exotic trees around the complex were good for both Amani and Banded Green Sunbirds as well as Green-Headed Oriole. We also spotted a Southern Banded Snake-Eagle perched on a dead tree in the distance before walking the Mbamole Hill Trail. Without having playback it took Martin about an hour to coax the Black-Fronted Bush-Shrike and Red-Tailed Ant-Thrush from a mixed flock, but we succeeded at getting great looks at both birds (I was especially relieved to finally record my first bush-shrike seen in Tanzania and am hoping this observation opens the floodgates, so to speak). In the afternoon, Martin and I walked the Turaco Trail, which passes through undisturbed forest and probably offers the highest quality forest birding in Amani, along with two other forest transects that he walks regularly as part of his research. I was hoping desperately to see the African Broadbill, but our real focus was on Turidae, of which there is unusually high diversity in the Usambaras due to the richness of the leaf litter on the forest floor. While we only recorded White-Chested Alethe, Martin tells me that during the period of the short rains, from October to November, when the robins and thrushes are breeding, he sometimes hears Swynnerton’s Robin, Sharpe’s Akalat, Orange Ground-Thrush, Spot-Throat, and others, an impressive array of similar skulking species all foraging through the same habitat.

Having also noted Bar-Tailed Trogon, Red-Faced Crimson-Wing, and Half-Collared Kingfisher that day, it was with great satisfaction that I relaxed in the evening after ten long hours of walking up and down steep trails. On our way out of the reserve the next morning, we stopped for an hour at a patch of lower elevation forest near the entrance gate at Sigi ($30 per person). Birding along the road, which is about 300 meters above sea level, we first encountered a magnificent male Peter’s Twinspot that stopped briefly to check us out peering through the undergrowth. Then, we encountered a huge mixed flock that left us scrambling to pick out the specialties, including Southern Hyliota, Kretschmer’s Longbill, Green-Headed Oriole, Chestnut-Fronted Helmet-Shrike, and Black-and-White Shrike-Flycatcher. In the midst of all the action, I pointed out to Martin a squat, large-eyed bird that looked a bit like a robin but with a heavier bill. It sat almost motionless on a branch within the forest as warblers and flycatchers bustled about, so it took me a minute to get him onto it. Imagine my embarrassment when he identified it as the African Broadbill, the very bird I had been hoping to find on this trip.

Notable birds seen: African Harrier-Hawk, African Crowned Eagle, Long-Crested Eagle, Southern Banded Snake-Eagle, African Hobby, Lemon Dove, Fischer’s Turaco, Silvery-Cheeked Hornbill, Half-Collared Kingfisher, Moustached Green Tinkerbird, Green Barbet, White-Eared Barbet, African Broadbill, Bar-Tailed Trogon, Greater Honeyguide, Mountain Wagtail, Little Greenbul, Shelley’s Greenbul, Stripe-Cheeked Greenbul, Cabanis’s Greenbul, Yellow-Streaked Greenbul, White-Browed Robin-Chat, White-Chested Alethe, Red-Tailed Ant-Thrush, Little Rush Warbler, Dark-Capped Yellow-Warbler, Common White-Throat, Willow Warbler, Yellow-Throated Wood-Warbler, Long-Billed Tailorbird, Black-Headed Apalis, Green-Backed Caramoptera, Kretschmer’s Longbill, African Dusky-Flycatcher, Black-Throated White-Eye, African Paradise Flycatcher, Pale Batis, Forest Batis, Southern Black Flycatcher, Yellow White-Eye, Olive Sunbird, Uluguru Violet-Backed Sunbird, Amani Sunbird, Banded Green Sunbird, Square-Tailed Drongo, Waller’s Starling, Black-Fronted Bush-Shrike, Red-Backed Shrike, Grey Cuckoo-Shrike, Chestnut-Fronted Helmet-Shrike, Green-Headed Oriole, Dark-Backed Weaver, Red-Faced Crimsonwing, Yellow-Bellied Waxbill, Peter’s Twinspot, Southern Hyliota, Cabanis’s Bunting.

Tarangire National Park: April 3-6, 2011

This is the period of the long rains in Tanzania, although you wouldn’t know it living in Dar es Salaam. Certainly, there has been the occasional rainstorm, but nothing voluminous enough to warrant the name. Inland perhaps it’s another story, as safari traffic typically slows to a halt in the national parks and game reserves. In fact, many camps and lodges are closed in April and May, leaving tourists and expatriate residents with the impression that the dirt roads are all impassable and the wild animals impossible to see. For birders, though, the rainy season is a glorious time in the savannah as many bird species develop their breeding plumage and seem to call all day. With the famous northern national parks beckoning green and empty, then, I decided to spend half of my weeklong vacation revisiting the celebrated Tarangire National Park, and the other half discovering the little-visited Amani Nature Reserve in the Eastern Usambara Mountains. In both places, the birding would prove significantly more impressive than the weather.

Tarangire is a long ways from Dar by tarmac road, which snakes up along the Western Umbasaras practically to the border with Kenya before looping back around to the southwest. Making a brief stop in Arusha, my colleague Cyrille and I spent twelve straight hours in the car, trading driving responsibilities in strictly managed two-hour intervals. It was brutal, but it would have been worse in my car, which doesn’t have air conditioning and rides a bit rougher. Despite the fatigue, our spirits soared as we headed from Arusha out into the open spaces of the Rift Valley. Passing languid goat herders from Maasai villages along the road, we raced to the park entrance before the gate closed at sunset. Tarangire Safaari Lodge had offered us a nice discount on one of their classic ensuite tents on the bluff overlooking the river, and we were hoping to start off our vacation by knocking back a few sundowners before dinner. Settling down on the terrace with a gin and tonic, I took in the beautiful scene spread out before us in the dying light: a family of elephants crossed the river, which was full from bank to bank, and marched slowly past the verdant baobab trees.

I awoke at dawn to a growing chorus of birdsong and lay in my bed peacefully, content to let the day slowly permeate through the windows and door to our tent. Within a few minutes, though I was stirred by an unfamiliar call, and thinking it could be a Rosy-Patched Bush-Shrike (I'm obsessed with bush-shrikes, none of which I've seen), I was dressed and out of the tent with my gear within seconds. Birding on foot along the bluff over the next few days would prove to be remarkably productive, as I cleaned up on some acacia forest species that I had missed on my previous trip to northern Tanzania, including Eastern Violet-Backed Sunbird, African Orange-Bellied Parrot, and Grey Woodpecker. More impressively, the bluff would yield some excellent views of perched and soaring raptors, including Martial Eagle, Brown Snake-Eagle, and Bateleur. For a few hours, then, I walked slowly back and forth in front of the empty tents, following up on different calls and coming quite close to a variety of fine birds for photographs, such as Red-and-Yellow Barbet, Nubian Woodpecker, and Ashy and Superb Starlings.

After a late breakfast, Cyrille and I decided it was finally time for a game drive, and we set off to along the Tarangire River, sticking to the northern side as the high water had overwhelmed the bridge. The story you’ll hear about going on safari in the rainy season is that the parks are more beautiful but the game is dispersed throughout the high grass, but that morning we must have encountered over a hundred elephants, dozens of giraffe, and a variety of antelope species. Unfortunately, we were also bombarded by tetse flies, which seemed to swarm through the windows of the car anytime we stopped to watch an animal or bird. These tough and nasty flies are famous for transmitting sleeping sickness with their painful bites; while the disease is very rare in this part of East Africa, we soon had multiple bites on our exposed ankles and arms. In defense, we rolled up the windows and turned on the air conditioning, which was an unpleasant but unavoidable strategy. As the bites on my ankles, arms, and face began to swell up uncomfortably over the next few days, I realized why this part of the country is still pristine in many parts and generally uninhabited: despite its beauty and fertile plains, insects and disease will quickly ravage humans and their relatively fragile livestock.

Before turning back to the lodge for lunch, I had spotted a number of new bird species, including Bare-Faced Go-Away-Bird, Brown-Crowned Tchagra, and Cardinal Quelea. It was Cyrille, though, who pointed out my first male Eastern Paradise-Whydah in breeding plumage, which must be one of the most delightful avian sights in East Africa. In the parking lot of the lodge, which is set amidst mature acacia woodland, I noticed an African Scops-Owl roosting on a branch snugly against a tree. At about 17 cm, this diminutive owl is widespread and common, but strictly nocturnal and tricky to notice during the daytime. The owl seemed too tired to be bothered by the sounds of my camera, but at one point it objected to my presence by drawing up tall and thin on its perch and raising its ear tufts slightly. Over lunch we noticed another tiny owl, this time the diurnal Pearl-Spotted Owlet, being mobbed by a variety of small birds as it hunted for insects and small lizards around the patio. Our luck with owls would continue that evening as we came across a pair of massive Verreaux’s Eagle-Owls at sunset.

Our most significant wildlife observation also came on that game drive, as we wound our through the tall grass along one of the many river circuits near the lodge. We stopped short in front of a Serval Cat that was ambling towards us on the track. Totally unfazed by the car, it sat on its haunches for a minute and stared around with heavy-lidded eyes, probably having just arisen from sleep. Passing right along the car, it then entered the tall grass where it stalks birds and rodents its on long legs. “No one ever photographs a Serval,” people keep telling me, but it’s the same cat that my friend Mark saw at the Momela Lakes in Arusha National Park in December, so it can’t be that rare to see. As this was the only cat we encountered during our four days in the park, having missed the lion, cheetah, and leopard, it ultimately helped to hear how lucky we were to find it. In fact, only one other group of tourists saw any cats that week, noting a female lion and her cub near Sopa Lodge, which was considerably deeper in the park than we would explore.

On the second day, we had originally planned to drive to the large swamp system in the remote southern section of the park, but with the rivers swollen with the rain in the hills, and with a shaky car battery, we decided to stay closer to the lodge. Our morning game drive took us past a juvenile Martial Eagle, which I confidently identified this time instead of confusing it with the African Crowned Eagle like I did at Sadaani National Park in February (it’s critical not to be distracted by the raised crest, but to focus instead on the thigh plumage and talon color). Having seen both species several times now, I also know enough to distinguish between them based on the habitat: one inhabits forest, the other savanna and more open woodland. At a small pond we also found a group of Knob-Billed Ducks, or Comb Duck as it’s known in South America, and a single Yellow-Crowned Bishop, which was another nice find by Cyrille, who’s still a fledgling birder. Throughout the grasslands, White-Winged Widowbirds and Cardinal Queleas were also in great abundance as the males established and defended their territories and chased the females wildly about.

In the evening, we drove out to the Little Serengeti area at the northern edge of the park, where the wide-open grasslands were flooded with rich yellow light. Hundreds of elephants were lumbering around, and the road was crowded with Two-Banded Coursers and a few Black-Faced Sandgrouses. We also passed a group of Rufous-Tailed Weavers that were foraging alongside of Red-Billed Buffalo-Weavers. The former is one of the Serengeti-Mara endemic bird species and has been placed in its own genus despite its association with the buffalo-weavers. As the light faded we headed back to the lodge, having searched half-heartedly along the river again for a leopard. We would leave for the Eastern Usambaras the following morning, which would turn out to be a much greater endeavor than we had planned.

Notable birds seen: Hamerkop, Marabou Stork, White Stork, Yellow-Billed Stork, White-Faced Whistling-Duck, Knob-Billed Duck, African White-Backed Vulture, Black-Shouldered Kite, African Fish Eagle, Tawny Eagle, Martial Eagle, Bateleur, Brown Snake-Eagle, Crested Francolin, Helmeted Guineafowl, Red-Necked Francolin, Yellow-Necked Francolin, Common Button-Quail, Black-Faced Sandgrouse, Spotted Thickknee, Two-Banded Courser, White-Bellied Bustard, Yellow-Collared Lovebird, African Orange-Bellied Parrot, Bare-Faced Go-Away-Bird, White-Bellied Go-Away-Bird, Red-Chested Cuckoo, Verreaux’s Eagle-Owl, Pearl-Spotted Owlet, African Scops-Owl, Woodland Kingfisher, Gray-Headed Kingfisher, Pied Kingfisher, African Pygmy Kingfisher, Little Bee-Eater, European Bee-Eater, Lilac-Breasted Roller, European Roller, African Hoopoe, Red-Billed Hornbill, Von der Decken’s Hornbill, Red-and-Yellow Barbet, Nubian Woodpecker, Bearded Woodpecker, Grey Woodpecker, White-Browed Scrub-Robin, Spotted Morning-Thrush, Grey-Backed Camaroptera, Yellow-Breasted Apalis, African Paradise-Flycatcher, Northern Pied Babbler, Beautiful Sunbird, Scarlet-Chested Sunbird, Eastern Violet-Backed Sunbird, Magpie Shrike, Brown-Crowned Tchagra, Red-Winged Starling, Ashy Starling, Swahili Sparrow, Red-Cheeked Cordon-Bleu, Cardinal Quelea, White-Winged Widowbird, Eastern Paradise-Whydah, Pin-Tailed Whydah, Yellow-Crowned Bishop.