With another substantial packed breakfast we were ready to
go good and early and a quick check of the river gave us the wonderful Bishops,
Weavers and two Purple Herons while the Boer-Bean trees were already hopping
with early birds.
Basically the whole day was spent on one very long, very
dusty road (the R355) that crosses the Tankwa Karoo from Ceres to Cavinia – a distance
of over 200km between the two towns with almost nothing in between. We trekked as far as Tankwa Padstal way
station before turning back.
It was a day of many short stops and began in with a Lark
hunt. Our primary target was Cape
Clapper Lark and it took just a few seconds to hear the first one and watch him
drop from his song flight with rattling wings that sound a bit like castanets. Red-capped
and Large-billed Larks were also in song and were watched on the track and we
got lucky with the Flapper and one came and perched up on the fence for us.
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| Cape Clapper Lark |
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| Cape Clapper Lark |
Grey-backed Cisticolas flicked across the road and African
Stonechats and Pipits were seen while we scanned the fields where Blue Cranes
danced and White-necked Ravens attended a water trough. Two Grey Rhebok were our first new antelope
of the day.
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| Grey Rhebok |
As we dropped down into the valley and joined the Tankwa
road properly we put up a Black Stork from along the van which headed back up
and over the ridge. This is a rare bird
down here and only the second Ian had seen in South Africa. This short stop gave us singing Cape Buntings
and Cape Grassbirds but neither were visible.
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| Black Stork |
The sinuous and deeply cut stream was staked out for Namaqua
Warbler and we quickly heard a couple but they did not show but find a pair of
Cape Penduline Tit, Brown-throated Martins, African Reed Warbler, Long-billed
Crombecs and Mountain Wheatears.
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| Cape Penduline Tit - Neil Colgate |
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| Long-billed Crombec - Neil Colgate |
The Crombecs behaved very differently to the jungle ones I
have seen and hopped and scurried over the boulders and scree like miniature
Rock Nuthatches. Breakfast at a shady
spot revealed the ground covered in more broken glass than I have ever seen in
one place but it was still a good spot with Large Rock Martins and Greater
Striped Swallows hawking around us while we were bogged at by sinister looking
Rock Hyraxes from the crags.
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| Mountain Wheatear |
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| Mountain Wheatear |
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| Rock Hyrax |
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| Rock Hyrax |
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| Rock Hyrax |
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| Rock Hyrax |
Booted Eagle and both Raven and Crow spiralled and Mountain
Wheatears and Familiar Chats were collecting food. A sylvia type warbler flew across in front of
me – feeling like a chunky Lesser White-throat and when it reappeared it was
just that – a Layard’s Warbler which fed unconcerned in front of us.
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| Booted Eagle |
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| Layard’s Warbler |
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| Layard’s Warbler |
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| Layard’s Warbler |
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| Layard’s Warbler - Neil Colgate |
Cape Buntings and Karoo Scrub-Robins were in song and
Bokmarerie were heard but were still only giving flight views. Three White-winged Starlings flew along the
river below and Pied Starlings were noted too. We crossed the road and tried a
cliff face for Cinnamon-breasted Warbler and I picked one up way up on the top
singing and flicking its tail. It came
down a little lower and amazingly stayed around long enough to get everyone
onto it in the scope. A subtle bird that
bounded around like the Crombec and was obviously at home on bare rock. A Cardinal Woodpecker called and Mandy saw it
briefly in the acacias and we were watched by another Mountain Wheatear. There were young SDC Sunbirds everywhere and
they seem to adapt to almost any habitat we have visited.
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| Mountain Wheatear |
The landscape became even dryer and the vegetation more spartan
but a green oasis to the east apparently had Hippos and we could see duck and Ostriches
around the margins and an Osprey circling.
On cue Karoo Chats started to appear on the fences looking
like greyer Mountain Wheatears and another stop at a line of tired acacias
quickly saw us finding two more new species with delicate Fairy Flycatchers and
feisty Rufous-eared Warblers looking like a cross between a Prinia and an
Apalis. They became one of my favourites
this day. A couple of Pale Chanting
Goshawks were found perched up prominently and while watching one of these
impressive raptors we saw a Steenbok in the grasses.
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| Karoo Chat |
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| Pale Chanting Goshawk |
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| Steenbok |
A little further on a herd of Gemsbok gracefully strode
alongside but were skittish and kept in the haze zone. These were my first Oryx in the wild and those
horns were so impressive.
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| Gemsbok |
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| Gemsbok |
We check out a rocky mount for Eremomelas but there was not
a sound and just some Canaries and Sunbirds and a couple of Rufous-eared
Warblers in the low scrub.
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| Mountain Wheatear - Neil Colgate |
Lunch at Katbakkies ‘picnic site’ felt like it should have given
us plenty of birds to find but it was hot and hard work in the thorny scrub and
although we got good views of a Bokmakerie, Southern Grey-headed Sparrows, Karoo
Scrub-Robins and White-backed Mousebirds there was actually nothing new here at
all. The giant Alloes were amazing
though.
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| Karoo Robin Chat - look at that tail! |
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Bokmakerie - Neil Colgate
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We retraced to the main road and continued onwards and after
some more roadside chats made it to the Tankwa Padstal shop, café and mechanic
workshop. What a wonderfully quirky
place with carefully paced dead cars looking like they have dropped out of the
sky and, well, a crashed Flying Saucer poking out of the desert.
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| A closer look at this 'property' sign made us chuckle |
Cape and House Sparrows and Familiar Chats joined us for a
drink and icecream and there were some Ostriches out back!
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| Cape Sparrows |
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| Familiar Chat |
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| Common Ostrich |
We drove down the side track onto a vast shimmering
stony plane in the hope of finding Spur-heeled Lark but other than an immature
Pale Chanting Goshawk it was almost birdless so we soon turned round and came
back but this time I did pick up a rather non-descript Sickle-winged Chat.
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| Pale Chanting Goshawk |
From this point we began the long journey back down the R355
with a few little stops giving us another listen to Namaqua
Warblers which again eluded our eyes.
Suddenly the track ended and we were back on tarmac but we
did not head straight back to Ceres but wiggled up onto the Witzenberg Valley
Road but Protea Canaries did not appear and we had to be content with Jackal Buzzards, White-rumped and Alpine Swifts, White-necked Ravens and two rock bouncing
Klipspringers – the most agile of dainty antelopes.
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| Klipspringer |
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| Jackal Buzzard |
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| Such amazing folding |
Back in Ceres we still had a little time before dinner and a
walk along the river gave flying views of the Giant Kingfisher once again but
the African Black Duck was still wary and kept swimming out of view. A small slim brown Mongoose crept across the lawns but it seems that Cape Grey is the only option? The Brown-throated Martins were excavating in
the sandy bank and below them a group of Streaky-headed Seed-eaters were feasting
on grassheads with the Cape Sparrows.
With the light going the evening chorus of shouty birds got going and
could still be heard as we dined.
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| Southern Red Bishops - Neil Colgate |
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| Streaky-headed Seed-eater |
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| Cape Sparrows |
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| I am puzzled as to how this skinny tailed beast is a Cape Grey Mongoose? There do not seem to be any Western Cape alternatives. |