Showing posts with label Yanacocha Reserve. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Yanacocha Reserve. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 4, 2012

Hummingbirds of Yanacocha

As I said in my last post, I reserved all my hummingbirds' pics from Yanacocha Reserve in order to show them to you in this gallery.  Ecuador is a blessed country, heart of the hummingbirds diversity, and Yanacocha offers a nice selection of them!  Even before reaching the feeders, we were counting several species feeding by the trail, including extravagant Black-tailed Trainbearers, aptly named Shining Sunbeams, and showy Rainbow-bearded Thornbill.  The thornbills are specialized for sucking the nectar of tiny, high Andean flowers, sometimes even "walking" from one flower to another!
Our first encounter with my life Buff-winged Starfrontlet almost ended in tragedy!  This male flew so furious directly to me that I thought he wanted to popped-out my eye!
One of the most common hummer was the Tyrian Metaltail.  Usually, it looks plain and non-attractive, but  with the right light angle PAM!, you got a very different bird (notice the individual at the feeder, along with a female Buff-winged Starfrontlet).
Once in the feeder, the activity was simply insane... tons of furious hummingbirds (and flowerpiercers) zipping everywhere.  The Golden-breasted Puffleg is a big one, not the best pic, because I had to use flash... and the hummingbirds pics with flash are quite tricky!
The Sapphire-vented Puffleg was a little bit more colorful than his cousin the Golden-breasted.  His long, fork tail, the sapphire-colored vent and his brilliant blue crown make this hummingbird a real flying gem!
We saw many pufflegs, metaltails, starfrontlets and even a male Mountain Velveltbreast for a second, but only a pair of Great Sapphirewing were attending the feeders... huge and colorful... nice combination!
However, there is an emblematic hummingbird at these feeders that makes you wonder how Mother Nature designed these little beasts... the Sword-billed Hummingbird is simply out of this world!  Despite how marginal is my photo, it shows well his marvelous and most significant characteristic: its disproportionally, crazy bill!  I hope you like this gallery... wait for more soon!

Ecuador, here we go!

And the birding continues!!!  After birding in Colombia and Venezuela, Rafael Cortes and your blogger host landed in Quito, Ecuador, late in the night after arriving in a short flight from Bogota.  Our friend José María Loaiza ("Chema") was already waiting for us at the airport and left us at our hotel in downtown Quito.  We only sleep a couple of hours, and soon Washington (our driver and soon-to-be bird guide) picked us and we started our first birding day in Ecuador.  We took the Eco-ruta del Quinde, the old Quito-Nono-Mindo-Milpe road, ascending to our first destination for the day: the Yanacocha Reserve.  Administered by the Fundación Jocotoco, this reserve protects 1200 hectares of high andean forest and paramos, and is essentially an easy place to watch some key species.
The landscapes and the views are incredible... but more incredible is the fact that you bird along a well marked, FLAT trail... which is pretty rare at this altitude (more than 3200 meters above sea level).
Some of the birds appeared almost immediately... the Glossy Flowerpiercer seemed to be everywhere, we saw and, specially, heard it constantly... and it allowed some photos!
We found some mixed flocks with tanagers and brush-finches, among others... this Hooded Mountain-Tanager was part of a party of at least four of them accompanying a mixed flock.  They looked like the big fat clowns of the tanager family.
A flash of color turned out to be an electrical Masked Flowerpiercer.  It proved later to be a common inhabitant of those forests.
We identified most of the birds right away... after all they were easy and well marked: Barred Fruiteater, both Scarlet-bellied and Black-chested Mountain-Tanagers, Blue-black Conebills, Rufous-naped Brush-Finches, Golden-crowned Tanager, and so on... but this juvenile Crowned Chat-Tyrant showed us why it is useful to carry huge texts with you, as Chema did!
The main stars of this reserve were the hummingbirds... but I'm reserving that story for another post.  After making some photos at the "Death Pass # 25", we started the descending along the Eco-ruta del Quinde, heading to the towns of Nono and Tandayapa.  
In the way, we witnessed how drastically changed the forests, becoming more and more exuberant.  We crossed a HUGE mixed flock, with such gems like Blue-winged Mountain-Tanagers, Crimson-rumped Toucanet, Plushcrown (two of them), White-banded Tyrannulet, Barred Becard, and many more... plus a Slaty-backed Chat-Tyrant at the river.
This is just beginning, so don't miss my next posts about this fantastic birding along the Eco-ruta del Quinde!