Surely one of the worlds most outrageous birds! Long-wattled Umbrellabird on day 3 of our Ecuador trip & the highlight so far. 🪶 #BirdsSeenIn2026
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What a brilliant & slightly surreal afternoons birding at Cors Ddyga. A great start when we found a pair of Gargany followed an hour later by a male Green-winged Teal, a self-found tick probably and probably my most looked for rarity, (a second bird to one already present nearby)🪶 #BirdsSeenInWales
A good couple of days birding on Anglesey: Yesterday a decent fall of migrants on Carmel Head; 48 Willow W, 22 Chifchaff , 12 Blackcap & my earliest Anglesey Tree Pipit & Sedge W. This morning I found 4 Avocet at Cemlyn, only my 3rd Anglesey record & first self-found birds. #BirdsInWales 🪶
The 4 Tundra Bean Geese were still present on the Alaw Estuary this afternoon. The only previous record for the county is a record of up to 3 birds at Ellyn Coron in November 2011. This makes these the 4th to 7th individuals for Anglesey. #BirdsinWales 🪶
Well, it's been a good start to the 2026 Anglesey patch season. First days birding & we find 4x Tundra Bean Geese on the Alaw Estuary. Fortunately the birds were still present today and managed to get some decent photos. An Anglesey tick & a Welsh rarity. 🪶 #BirdsSeenIn2026
As we wanted to spend a few days on the Med coast of France, we decided to explore the Camargue, staying just outside Saintes-Maries-de-la-Mer. A lovely town & great birding. The highlight being, superb views of a Lesser Flamingo amongst thousands of the local Greater Flamingos. 🪶 #BirdsSeenIn2026
After traveling along the mediterranean coast of Spain from Malaga, we have now crossed into France. Some nice birding on the way with highlights being; improved views of Black Wheatear, Trumpeter Finch, Great Skua & plenty of Slender-billed & Audouin's Gulls. 🪶 #BirdsSeenIn2026
Marbled Duck, last time I saw one was Morocco in 1993
After 2 weeks of being out of my comfort zone - city sightseeing around southern Spain, we are now starting the slow journey home & birding again😀. Currently heading east along Spains south coast & enjoying more species not seen for many years + a few migrants moving through.
A mere 18 years for me. 😂
We've now made it down to the south coast of Spain & parked up near Malaga. Really enjoyed seeing species I've not seen for many years, in some instances decades! The birding highlight has been Dupont's Lark near Zaragoza, which I've only seen once before in Morocco, in 1993.
Photo of single individual
Extremely pleased to connect with Iberian Lynx yesterday - Over half an hour spent with not 1 but 3 of these brilliant cats. A single and an adult with well grown cub. Not the best video, but the views were great through the scope.
Finally after 5 days of driving; through 2 storm, 5 days of rain & high winds (reaching 60mph yesterday), we have had a dry & non-travel day. Now in northern Spain and enjoying lovely views from the camper of the local church complete with its 6+ White Stork nests. 😀🍷☀️ 🪶 #BirdsSeenIn2026
Our 2nd day in France on our French/Spanish road trip. Hoping to escape our awful British weather, but so far it's even worse with fairly constant wind & rain. Managed an hours birding this am and picked up my 1st Short-toed Treecreeper & Middle Spotted Woodpeckers since 1990! 🪶 #BirdsSeenIn2026
Well, our Brazil trip finally comes to an end. There has. definitely been a Rallidae theme throughout, with a total 18 species of rail seen. First tick of the trip was a Little Wood Rail & final tick of the trip, a very confiding Rufous-sided Crake. 🪶 #BirdsSeenIn2026
Piculets, a distinct sub-family of Woodpeckers, have always been a favourite of mine, so I was pleased to see a new one: Mottled Piculet in Santa Catarina, Brazil yesterday. 🪶 #BirdsSeenIn2026
Now on our 3rd leg of the tour, South Brazil. One of the key targets was Canebrake Groundcreeper, which, at the 3rd site we visited for it and half an hour of hide and seek, it finally showed well. 🪶 #BirdsSeenIn2026
An excellent couple of days birding Alagoas state, Brazil, with all the main targets seen. One of the key species here is the range restricted Seven-coloured Tanager which eventually showed quite well. 🪶 #BirdsSeenIn2026
We have now moved on to the second leg of our Brazil trip: Alagoas. An area I missed on my previous NE Brazil trip and one with a number of rare & range restricted species & this will certainly be the rarest; Orange-bellied Antwren, with a world population of about 20 pairs! 🪶 #BirdsSeenIn2026
Incredible views of a day roosting Rufous Nightjar this morning, near Caxias, Brazil. A species I've missed on a couple of trips previously, so great to finally catch up with one. 🪶 #BirdsSeenIn2026
This certainly isn't the best photo of the trip, but it almost certainly will be the best bird of the trip. One of two Rufous-vented Ground-cuckoos see near Caxias, Brazil, this afternoon. 🪶 #BirdsSeenIn2026
An impressive 8 species of Rallidae seen over the last two days, with today's highlight being this Yellow-breasted Crake near Arari, in Maranhao, Brazil. 🪶 #BirdsSeenIn2026
And we're off. First tick the trip, Little Wood-Rail in mangroves just outside San Luis. All the better having missed this species on my NE Brazil trip a few years ago. 🪶
Couldn't resist the temptation to nip down to my old stomping ground of Westport Lake, to see the recently discovered Yellow-browed Warbler. My first visit for several years. An (old) patch & county tick. 🪶
My final birding and tick of the trip - an excellent pelagic off Valparaiso: Good numbers of the recently described Andean Storm-petrel (potential Wilsons split), but the highlight was a brief Juan Fernandez Petrel ✅. 2x Chatham Albatross were also notable.
Although there were no new birds involved, I could not resist the temptation to do a little night birding on our last night up in the Andes. Pleased we made the effort, with great views of Band-winged Nightjar & Lesser Horned Owl. 🪶
Just spent 4 nights in the Andes east of Santiago, based in Farellones, a ski resort town. Great birding & nobody around. One of the highlights has been getting great views of Crag Chilia a central Chile endemic.🪶
Finally, on our 3rd morning of trying, and as we were about to give up again - we scored on our 8th new and our final Tapaculo of the trip: White-throated Tapaculo. Chile is the place to see some of the best members of this brilliant family.🪶
My 2 most wanted species on our Chile trip were the Black-throated & Chestnut-throated Huet-huets. We had decent albeit brief sightings of Black-throated a few days ago but no photos. I was hoping Chestnut-throated would improve on this. Happily it did directly outside our lodge! 🪶
Over the past few weeks we have tried for Austral Pygmy-Owl on numerous occasions to no avail, so much so, I was starting to believe we were going to miss it completely. Today that worry was removed - well and truly removed! 🪶