The day dawned with howling Golden Jackals, the Scops Owls and just three moths to my light before our very early start to head for the Vrontous mountains to the west
above Serres.
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| Brindled Beauty |
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| Dicranura ulmi |
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| Pale Shoulder |
After wiggling through the narrow streets we the habitat began to
open out and the quest for Rock Partridge truly began.
We parked up and found ourselves in the midst of a beautiful
dawn chorus. Eastern Black-eared
Wheatears and slim, pale libanotica Northern Wheatears sung from the boulder fields,
along with Wood and Crested Larks, Cuckoos, Cirl Buntings and both Eastern
Orphean and Subalpine Warblers.
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| Eastern Subalpine Warbler |
Up slope a Sombre Tit was properly singing which was not
something I had heard before and there were Stonechats and Woodchats too. Of our quarry there was no sign or sound but
with Golden Oriole and Black Woodpeckers calling in the valley below and
Hoopoes and a spectacular Rock Thrush both using the telegraph poles as
song perches, it was a great place to spend breakfast.
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| Rock Thrush and a Kestrel |
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| Hoopoe |
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| Rock Thrush |
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| Hoopoe |
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| And I never knew that the call of a Hoopoe sounds a bit like a distant cawing Rook |
The Rock Thrush was spectacular and my best views since the famous
Holme golf course male of over 30 years ago.
Such vibrant colours and a fluttering display flight that allowed him to
puff out his white rump and lower back.
I still reckon that this one of the whole trip highlights for me.
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| Rock Thrush |
We had a few bits and bobs fly over while we waited and
watched for Partridges with Crossbills and Short-toed Larks, Ravens and a male
Montagu’s Harrier that purposefully headed north.
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| Montagu’s Harrier |
Dancho opted to carry on up the mountain road and we chose a
spot that took us on a forest track through the pines to a more open vista with
a view up to the Vrontous itself. The
woods held our first Song Thrushes along with Blackbirds, Coal, Blue, Great, Long-tailed, Marsh
and Crested Tits along with Goldcrest and a couple of showy Firecrests. Cuckoos were singing all around and there
was plenty of food with all the Pine Processionary Moth nests dotted around.
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| Crested Tit |
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| Wood Ant nest |
There was an outside chance of Wallcreeper but a microscopic
Black Redstart, Crag Martins and Red-rumped Swallows were al we could see way
up there but a Tree Pipit was parachuting below us and a pair of Rock Buntings
were nesting close to the path so we backed off and had a good view of the male
singing from a dead pine. A Dunnock
briefly sung as we started to walk back.
Florally it was completely different and the micro Violas were my
favourite. Queen of Spain Fritillaries zipped back and forth and there were a
few Bumbles to be seen.
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Euphorbia cyparissias
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| Cowslip - Primula veris - although these feel different o ours back home |
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| Grape Hyacinth - Muscari botryoides |
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| Viola parvula |
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Viola parvula
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Viola tricolor
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Wood Spurge - Euphorbia amygdaloides
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| Red-tailed Bumblebee |
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| White-tailed Bumblebee |
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| Queen of Spain Fritillary |
Not far from the van a Black Woodpecker started to yaffle
and we were able to track it down and had close views as it played
peekaboo. We looped around and could
hear more than one and soon had at least three birds playing chase through the
trees and giving quite good views if you moved back and forth to look through the
trunks. This was my no means a
guaranteed species on this tour so there were smiles all round. Nuthatches and Common Treecreepers were added
and a Bullfinch, Semi-collared Flycatcher and several Chiffchaffs were heard.
We continued all the way to the end of the road at the
seasonally closed ski ‘resort’ and had a wander around the still winter Beech
woods. Mistle Thrushes on the Crocus and
Squill covered grassy ski-slope were the only signs of life and unsurprisingly
Nutcrackers were unresponsive.
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| Condemned but no fencing. We marvelled at the variety of H&S risks available |
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| Alpine Squill - Scilla bifolia |
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| Meadow Gagea - Gagea pratensis |
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| Spring Crocus - Crocus vernus |
With time pressing on we descended the mountain and had a
last look at the Partridge spot which was now very quiet before dropping back into
Serres and continuing on our way east.
Lunch was taken at a fabulous patisserie (Estonian Tarvo would have been
very impressed with Dancho’s cake finding skills) where an after lunch
ice-cream was taken while watching and listening to the jingle jangle of Serins. I think I may have slept for a while but
remember a Middle Spotted Woodpecker bouncing across the road at some point
before we reached the Nestos Gorge for what was too short a walk but the views
along the fast flowing crystal clear river and up into the towering cliffs
above was superb and although Wallcreepers did not flutter by we still found
several Short-toed Eagles and hawking Crag Martins and in the Willows on the
other side of the river we could hear the chipping of Eastern Bonelli’s Warbler
and a calling Lesser Spotted Woodpecker.
Eastern Greenish Black Tip was the pick of the butterflies – quite superb
but like Orange Tips – never stopped but it was the botany that wowed above all
else. |
| Garden Heliotrope - Valeriana officinalis |
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| Haberlea rhodopensis - endemic to the range |
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| Hypericum aucheri |
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| Iris reichenbachii - normally yellow but in the Rhondos they are lilac |
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| King's Spear - Asphodeline lutea - almost over |
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| Maidenhair Spleenwort - Asplenium trichomanes |
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| Med Spurge - Euphorbia characias |
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| Mountain Pennycress - Noccaea montana |
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| Muscari matritense |
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| Muscari matritense |
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| Onosma viridis |
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| Rustyback Fern - Asplenium ceterach |
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| Southern Dame's violet - Hesperis laciniata |
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| Southern Polypody - Polypodium cambricum |
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| Tulipa agenensis - too far up to look inside! |
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| Bladderpod - Alyssoides utriculata |
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| Crosswort - Cruciata laevipes |
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| Downy Buttercup - Ranunculus lanuginosus |
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| Smiffy in the river |
Onwards to our new hotel in the small coastal village of
Fanari. It was a delightful place and
overlooked the harbour where Yellow-legged Gulls loafed. Redshanks, Stilts and Spur-winged Lapwings
were seen on the drive in through the saltmarshes and offshore I could see
Yelkouan Shearwaters from my apartment window while a Scops Owl began singing
as we walked back from our dinner in town.
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| Fanari harbour view |
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| Fanari Dinner Tom |
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| While above your head... |