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Israel Trip ReportsRound trip 24 March - 5 April 2000 Birding trip report by John van der Woude Thursday 30 March
After an enormous breakfast in our hotel (the conveniently located
Mercure), we drove on to the raptor watch point for the first
of four visits: Steppe Buzzard and Steppe Eagle. Now the information
circuit started to work, because we got a tip to visit the Km
37 along highway 90. There we saw the promised Bimaculated Lark
and the Caspian Plover (female), and also Short-toed Lark and
some other migrant passerines, in a temporarily interesting arable
field (a lot to eat). Funny to see red spotted (svecica) and white
spotted (cyanecula of S and C Europe) Bluethroat together. The
next stop was Yotvata (see map) where e had three Citril Wagtails,
all in different plumage, at the small sewage pond and a Bonelli's
Warbler in the acacias. A first visit in late p.m. to the 'lark
field' of Km 33 was not productive except for a Desert Lark, and
we rounded the day off with what every birder will do in his or
her first day in Eilat: the pumping station at the back of Eilat
(see map) for the show of drinking Lichtenstein's Sandgrouse.
Splendid birds!
In late afternoon we did the Northern Reservoirs at Km 20. Six
bee-eaters were sitting on a fence and two Quails kept walking
beside our car (photos in part 1). In the huge ponds (see photo)
were several Marsh Sandpipers, Stilts, 70+60 Flamingos and a Greater
Sand Plover amidst dozens of Kentish Plovers in their first migration
influx.
Now we had info for a couple of interesting species at Km 40,
where some arable fields (see map) were known for passerines at
the moment. We got them all: Cinereous Bunting (in a group of
Ortolan Buntings), Pale Rock Sparrow (extremely quietly sitting
in the shade of a low bushy crop), and after a long collective
search in the date palm plantation (see photo) an Olive-backed
Pipit. Driving between these fields we also got extremely good
and prolonged views of a Corn Crake, walking along a dripping
water pipe alongside the track. Back to Km 20 we went for one last try to find Dead Sea Sparrow, and indeed I saw one group of these small and pale sparrows racing overhead. After the usual voluminous breakfast we went to the raptor watch point one more time, and in only one hour, from 9.50 to 10.50 a.m., we watched the passing overhead of thousands, I think 4000, Steppe Buzzards. Rather lost in between them were Steppe Eagle (3), Black Kite (20 or so), Sparrowhawk (3). Photo left is just an impression of the multitude. Then we entered the hot mountain valley of wadi Shlomo (see Eilat map, and photo below), driving very slowly with the airco on. Besides with the scenery we were rewarded with a Rüppel's Warbler twice, in some of the few (acacia) trees here. Especially where the wadi is halfway joined by the wadi Rekhav'am, there were some more of these acacias and here we had Little Green Bee-eater, Palestine Sunbird and Sardinian Warbler as well, species more common on the earlier part of the trip. Blackstart is always present in these stony desert areas.
Going down through this valley we arrived around noon at the
Red Sea 1 km left of Coral Beach national Park, a small coral
reef. This has been made easily accessible for watching the corals
and fishes, even without going into the water. But that's what
we did, with snorkeling gear for rent at the entrance (21 shekel
complete set), where they also have showers and lockers. The fishes,
large and small, were overwhelmingly beautiful.
We went back a while along the 40 towards the Arava valley. First
we had Trumpeter Finch and Scrub Warbler in the stony wadi along
the road down. Then we paid a visit to the Lotan kibbutz terrain
where we had a female Rock Thrush at the swimming pool, but very
few birds at the specially created little reserve for bird ringing.
This little oasis looks promising though. We helped pushing a
car of Swedish birders out of the sand, something for which we
would be rewarded by them with some very good birds the next morning.
Photo is of Arava valley S of Lotan. Tuesday 4 April
So now we had seen four of the five Sandgrouses of Southern Israel,
and for the fifth one, Black-bellied, we followed the Swedes to
a new pool near the gas station, now that the former 'official'
pools had dried out. It is scarcely possible now to watch the
wary sandgrouses here (Spotted and indeed Black-bellied) without
disturbing them. Most of the Spotted's did not dare to drink although
we (4 + 2 Swedes, 2 Brits, 2 Dutch) stood motionless. This was
between 8 and 8.30 a.m. Photo is of wadi near the fort.
In the afternoon we drove back east and then south a bit along
the 40 again, to En Avdat National Park, a gorge in a limestone
plateau. To get to the best (= bottom) part of the gorge, take
the road to Midreshet Ben Gurion and keep right when arriving
there, going downhill all the time till the parking place behind
the entrance. Scenically it is a highly interesting area, a narrow
gorge with pools at the bottom (see photo), and we had good birds
as well. Bonelli's Eagle nests halfway to the left, and around
closing time (5 p.m.) both adults circled in the gorge, as if
celebrating the withdrawal of all those visitors. The air in the
gorge was filled with swallows and swift: Alpine Swift, Swift,
House Martin, Pale Crag Martin, Red-rumped Swallow. Egyptian and
Griffon Vultures stood watching on the ledges in the walls of
the gorge. A Scrub Warbler was present in the bushes near the
pools at the bottom. There we had a few Green Sandpipers and much
to our surprise a Water Rail at only 10 m, splendidly lit from
all sides in this white-stone gorge. According to the warden Eagle
Owl had not been seen here a while.
Wednesday 5 April We still got our share in the raptors, appetizing enough for coming back in another year and earlier in the season. First we got a Peregrine in one of the high pylons. Then a female Marsh Harrier with extremely white shoulder patches came along, busily hunting and hardly noticing us. At a cluster of trees in this otherwise totally open landscape (see photo) we had a female Merlin, chasing around. Another trip tick was male Montagu's Harrier, bringing our number of raptor species to 22. Regularly we also saw Black Kite here. There was some migration too: White Stork (a group of 500), Crane (30 resting and feeding on a small arable field), some Short-toed Larks, and a group of 4 Bee-eaters flying straight North, a strange view if you have always only seen them flying in circles at their breeding grounds. An Isabelline Wheatear tried to distract us, apparently it was breeding there. For the last hours of the trip we wanted to be in some lush Mediterranean bush vegetation, something we had scarcely seen earlier on the trip. I'm afraid that little of this is left in Israel. However, along road 38 some 20 km SW of Jerusalem there is some, and we found a nice spot at the first dirt road left of the first side road right to Nekusha (see photo below). Nice to have Sardinian Warbler territorial here, and Short-toed Eagle is common here. A Lesser Whitethroat (migrant only in Israel) was singing, and indeed this song is missing the entire rattling part of the song, as we know it in Western Europe.
Further North are large reforestation plots, and here during our late lunch we had six Short-toed Eagles together, probably competing for territories. There we finally also saw a few orchid species. After checking in at the Ben Gurion airport the birding was not over yet. We sat at the external windows of the self-service restaurant on the first floor above the main hall from 5.30 p.m. Here, we witnessed the arrival of groups of Spanish Sparrow at their night roost behind café Tasim, about 20 groups of 100 each. Even closer by was a night roost of wagtails, White and a few Yellow, in the palms at the Blue Moon kiosk. We went outside to have a closer look at both roosts, and enjoyed the choir of musical cheeps of those two thousand Spanish Sparrows, but soon ended up having a last beer at the terrace before our flight back home to Amsterdam. John van der Woude, The Netherlands http://home-1.tiscali.nl/~jvanderw Contact infoDaphna Abell |
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