Sunday, February 24, 2019

Ecuador, Day 4

On December 4th we drove to the Refugio Paz de las Aves where we were blessed by the appearance of five different antpittas.  However we started with a visit to the lek of the Cocks-of-the-Rock. It was everything I'd hoped.  Lots of male birds making a lot of noise.  All that could have improved it was a visit from a female. Dianne and I had one major goal in our photos.  Get the beak.  She succeeded better than I did, but if you look closely and not exactly where you expect you might glimpse a tiny pale orange bill.

Because I took so many thousands of photos on our Ecuadorian trip, I am trying to delete multiples. With some birds I can do this, but not very well with the Cocks-of-the-rock.  They are so red, and so  plushy looking and so unlike anything I had ever seen before.

Leaving the lek, Angel Paz and his brother Rodrigo called, or lured, in some birds that are very difficult to see randomly in the forest.

The first of these was Maria the Giant Antpitta.  We are not certain that this is the first Giant Antpitta named Maria.  We aren't even sure it is a female.  But neither of those things is important.
Our next discovery were three Dark-backed Wood-Quails.  They were fed on the edge of the mountain path where we were walking.  The guide worked diligently to hide the bananas that had lured them in so that we could pretend we'd seen them unexpectedly.  It does make for a better photo. I try to do the same thing at the more conventional feeders.
 

Then it was time for the Rufous-breasted Anttrush, a very pretty bird showing similar colours to the previous birds, just arranged differently. They must be colours that fade well into the forest floor.
The next hour or so was all Antpittas. First was the Yellow-breasted Antpitta.  Not bright yellow, but so pretty.
Then the Chestnut-crowned Antpitta, the one I was most hopeful to see before we arrived.
The Ochre-breasted Antpitta is cute and little.
The last of our five antpittas was the Moustached Antpitta.  More serious looking than the others.
Following this we wandered along some paths which revealed the Powerful Woodpecker
and a Toucan Barbet, one of my target birds of this trip. It has as many colours asJoseph's coat.
We watched this bird fly into a hole in a tree, assume that it fed a baby, and fly out again.

Later in the day we saw a few new birds including a Golden-olive Woodpecker,
a Pale-legged Hornero
and a Coopman's Elaenia whose biggest claim to fame was that it was recently separated from the Lesser Elaenia and so was a new bird for our guide as well. This is yet another member of that huge family of birds, flycatchers.
Day 4 had 30 new trip birds including 16 life birds for us.