HMANA Panama Raptor Spectacular. October 28 th November 4 th Detailed Itinerary

Similar documents
Belize Bird Check List 1/7. Belize Bird Check List - FAMILY SPECIES CHECK DATE AREA

Count Summary Report

Great Tinamou One seen on Pipeline Road, heard most days around the Tower. Little Tinamou One seen near the entrance to Pipeline Road.

Trip Report for 06 days birding tour For Ballard Family 02nd May :

Panama, mostly Darien 11/19-11/28/2016. Stefan Schlick Pix:

CERRO BLANCO and vicinity

PANAMA S BIRDS AND WILDLIFE

Panama A Majestic Feathers Birding Tour with Edwin Ramirez April 8 to 18, 2014 Price $3,980 I T I N E R A R Y

List of Monteverde September 2017

Osa Peninsula - Bird Checklist

Black-bellied Whistling Duck Fulvous Whistling-Duck Gadwall American Wigeon Mallard Mottled Duck Blue-winged Teal Cinnamon Teal Northern Shoveler

Panama - Canopy Tower

Panama - Canopy Tower

Species Accounts: Abbreviations:

PLATE NO. CODE SPECIES

Trip Report for Venture to Pico Bonito Lodge, Honduras February 15 22, 2014

Sunrise Birding LLC PANAMA TRIP REPORT September 4-14, 2012

Panama Birding & Nature Trip Report January 14 23, 2018 Written by Pat Lueders

ORIOLE BIRDING [0]

FLIGHTS OF FANCY ADVENTURES, LLC PANAMA CANOPY TOWER & CANOPY LODGE JULY 19-27, 2014 TRIP REPORT

Panama Birding at Canopy Tower and Lodge March 16 24, 2019 with Optional extension March 24 26, 2019 with Elissa Landre

PANAMA. Trip Report. Canopy Tower and Lodge April 5-16, 2011

Panamanian Paradise Reader Rendezvous Itinerary Tranquilo Bay & Canopy Tower November 5-14, 2019

ITINERARY. Panama At Road s End Harpy Eagles in the Darién

Costa Rica Bird Scouting Trip. PN Braulio Carrillo-Cerro de la Muerte area- Durika sabanas and forests-esquinas Lodge

THE BIRDS OF PANAMA A BIRDER S SAFARI HOSTED BY BARB REVARD DIRECTOR OF PROGRAM PLANNING, COLUMBUS ZOO AND AQUARIUM JUNE 9-16, 2017 HARPY EAGLE

TRIP REPORT PANAMA CANOPY FAMILY TOUR November 2016

Panama. Budget Birding. Budget Darién Extension. 3 rd to 13 th September 2020 (11 days) 13 th to 19 th September 2020 (7 days)

HUNGRYLAND BIRD LIST

Tour 14: Yellow Jkt Cyn and Cyn of the Ancients Guest Ranch. Tour 12: Nature Center at Butler Corner 1/2 Day. Tour 11: Pontoon on McPhee Reservoir

Ute Mountain Mesa Verde Birding Festival Bird Species Tally May 9-13, 2018

Ecuador Photo Journey

Panama. Budget Birding. Budget Darién Extension. Rufous-crested Coquette by Rich Lindie

COSTA RICA ESCAPE TOUR

Trinidad & Tobago December 27, January 5, 2013 Leader: Bill Murphy

Travis Audubon Birding Panamá's Canopy Tower and Darien Camp with Laurie Foss

Commonly Seen Birds of the Prescott Area

Wings N Wetlands Bird List

/BUVSF4DBQF 5PVST. :VDBUBO 1FOJOTVMB #JSEJOH UIF -BOE PG UIF.BZB * = Rare

Bird Observations. Date Range: For. 1 of 5 2/29/2016 8:36 AM. Home About Submit Observations Explore Data My ebird Help

ZELLWOOD BIRD COUNTS JUNE, 2016

ORIOLE BIRDING TOUR REPORT PANAMA 2012

Summary of the 2011 Gallon Jug CBC

WVWA 2018 Wissahickon Birdathon Checklist

Ute Mountain Mesa Verde Birding Festival Bird Species Tally May 10 14, 2017

Panama 12/05/11 1/06/11

Rancocas Birds Bar Graphs

Panama Birding at Canopy Tower and Lodge. March 8-16, 2013 with Sue MacCallum Optional extension to Darien Region March 16-19

January 13-21, 2016 Panama Nature, History & Birding

Naturalist Journeys, LLC Panama Species List 2013

Jaeger sp. 1 White-faced Ibis 2 Peregrine Falcon 1 Lincoln's Sparrow 4 bold

Saturday, 27 December 2014 to Sunday, 4 January 2015: 9 days & 8 nights

Bird Species Of the Gamboa Area

TICK LIST GAMBIA 2016

BIRD MIGRATION IN THE STRAIT OF GIBRALTAR

Panama Canal Zone & Chiriqui Highlands April 14-22, 2012 Lucky Ladies & Friends TRIP REPORT

ZELLWOOD BIRD COUNTS FEBRUARY, 2017

Hummingbirds of Ecuador's Andean Cloud Forest

Ruddy Shelduck Gadwall Eurasian Wigeon Mallard Green-winged (Common) Teal Common Merganser Swamp Francolin Kalij Pheasant Indian Peafowl Lettle Grebe

Tico Tours Costa Rica: Pacific High-Low Adventure

Observers: Blair Francis, Eva Armi, Frank Wong, Phillip White, Amrit Sidhu, David Mathis, Barbara Dunn, Gary Grantham, and Anonymous

Species Lists / Bird Walk Dates X= Species Seen, ssp or morph noted; X New Species at CCNHC; X First of Season Migrant

BELLAVISTA DISCOVERY PACKAGES

Table 1: Birds originally banded by Birds Without Borders Aves Sin Fronteras staff and later recovered by others

Bird Checklist - Jhilmil Jheel Conservation Reserve Hardwar, Uttarakhand, IN. 220 species + - Year-round, All Years

ECUADOR: Photo Journey

BIRDS OF PACIFIC MEXICO Paradise Birding trips to Nayarit, Jalisco, and Colima:

Panama. Budget Darién Extension. 5 th to 12 th July 2019 (8 days)

Sunday, 3 August through Monday, 11 August 2014: 9 days & 8 nights

BIRDING TOURS WORLDWIDE. ITINERARY PANAMA S CANOPY TOWER February 3-9, 2019 Canopy Lodge Extension, February 9-13, 2019

Observers: David Blue, Will Cox, Kathy Estey, Blair Francis, Don Grine, and Herb Knufken

BIRD LIST FOR TABIN WILDLIFE RESORT

Costa Rica A UNIQUE WAY TO EXPERIENCE THE RAINFOREST. June 10 th - June 21 st, 2019 PHOTO EXPEDITION. Scarlet Macaw.

SOUTH PERU: BIRDING THE INCA EMPIRE, MOUNTAINS AND LOWLAND RAINFORESTS

TAS Trinidad and Tobago Birding Tour June 14-24, 2012 Brian Rapoza, Tour Leader

Trip Report: Río Orinoco (Amazonas State), Venezuela

ROCKJUMPER Tours for Biodiversity Belize Crooked Tree & the Cockscomb Basin (7 days)

Basic Bird Classification. Mia Spangenberg. Goal: Identify 30 species

Observers: Herb Knüfken, Bob Glaser, Frank Wong, Kathy Dickey, Eva Armi, Gary Grantham, Ingo Renner, John Bruin, and Anonymous. Total of species 89

Panama: Intro to Tropical Biodiversity With Naturalist Journeys & Caligo Ventures

Mainland Ecuador trip Oct (Thomas Garm Pedersen)

CAIRNS/DAINTREE/ATHERTON TABLELANDS-NINE NIGHT ITINERARY OCTOBER 10 th 19 th 2017.

Greater White-fronted Goose Snow Goose** Brant Cackling Goose Canada Goose Cackling/Canada - undifferentiated goose sp.

Black-bellied Whistling Duck X X Fulvous Whistling Duck Canada Goose X X X X X Trumpeter Swan X X Wood

FALL IN CENTRAL PANAMA

Sightings Record Panama and Central America 12/11/17 Miami, Florida, USA 13/11/17 Key West, Florida, USA 14/11/17 Sea Day

Costa Rica A Wildlife Photography Tour

Egg Dates for Species that Breed in the SAAS Chapter Area

Common Babbler, Arrow-marked. Common Barbet, Black-collared. Common Barbet, Crested. Common Batis, Chinspot

Costa Rica A UNIQUE WAY TO EXPERIENCE THE RAINFOREST. June 21 st - July 3 rd, 2019 PHOTO EXPEDITION. Scarlet Macaw. Keel-billed Toucan

GUATEMALA: BIRDING THE VOLCANIC HIGHLANDS AND THE MAYAN EMPIRE

Greenlaw Mountain Hawk Watch Fall 2014


A survey of Birds of Forest Park in Everett, Washington

Tenoroc. Bird List. Symbols used in this checklist. Tenoroc. Wildlife Management Area. Type. Seasons. Breeding. How you can help

Panama - Birding the Darién Gap

COLOMBIA: BIRDING THE INTER-ANDEAN VALLEYS OF THE EASTERN, WESTERN, AND CENTRAL CORDILLERAS

10 th Annual Mono Basin Bird Chautauqua Sightings 2011 All Chautauqua Field Trips and Chautauqua Week

S. E. Brazil November 2011

Fort Bragg CBC. 0cw. Area 5 (Joleen) Area 6 Area 7 Area 8 Area 9 Feeders. Area 5 (Art) 2a (tracks) Area 3 Area 4. Area 5 (Erica)

Transcription:

HMANA Panama Raptor Spectacular October 28 th November 4 th 2017 Detailed Itinerary As with all HMANA Tours flexibility will be key and our guides will be in constant contact with local hawkwatch sites to make sure that we make the most of any raptor movement during the day. This means that the field trips described below may well be switched or curtailed depending on the day s raptor flight. Day 1 PM: Arrival & Canopy Tower Observation Deck Upon arrival at the airport, you will be met by a driver who will transfer you to the Canopy Tower, located at the top of Semaphore Hill in the rainforest of Soberanía National Park. We enjoy seven nights at this highly-acclaimed eco-lodge. Upon arrival at the lodge you will be provided with an orientation on the use of the facilities. The HMANA group will rendezvous at the lodge and then spend some time on the Observation Deck. The view from the platform is incredible! Here, you get a unique eye-level perspective of the rainforest canopy. Many birds, including toucans, parrots, tanagers of various types, hawks, and dozens of others, as well as two species of sloths, three species of monkeys, large basking Green Iguanas and other animals are commonly seen. This will be your first opportunity to see huge kettles of hawks and other raptors swirling overhead! From this vantage point you can also see ships transiting the Panama Canal, the majestic Centennial Bridge and miles of rainforest! You may also want to visit the hummingbird feeders at the base of the Tower for Long-billed Hermit, White-necked Jacobin, Violet-bellied & Blue-chested hummingbirds and White-vented Plumeleteer. Occasionally, a Snowybellied Hummingbird is spotted! Dinner at CANOPY TOWER. Day 2 AM: Raptor Watch: Canopy Tower Observation Deck/Semaphore Hill/Ancon Hill Your guide will be waiting for you up on the Observation Deck to watch for the migrating hawks, but also to help you sort out the birds that woke you up this morning! While looking for birds, you can enjoy hot coffee, tea and orange juice. Some of the bird species we hope to see from the observation deck are Green & Red-legged honeycreepers, Green Shrike-Vireo, Blue Cotinga, Scaled Pigeon, Mealy & Redlored parrots, Keel-billed Toucan, Collared Araçari, flycatchers of various kinds and raptors, including King Vulture and Ornate Hawk-Eagle! At this time of year, hawk migration is at its peak as thousands of Broad-winged and Swainson's hawks and Turkey Vultures, along with Osprey, Peregrine Falcons and perhaps a trailing Swallow-tailed Kite or two fly long distances from their northern breeding grounds through the Isthmus to South America. It is impressive to say the least and the Observation Deck at the Canopy Tower is the best place to view this spectacle! The Canopy Tower Semaphore Hill Hawkwatch is an official count site for the Hawk Migration Association of North America (HMANA), and annually they count over 300,000 migrating raptors over the Canopy Tower itself, with over 3 million passing over the Isthmus of Panama. We will take every opportunity we can during this tour to view this annual event. Canopy Tower s official hawk counter will be on the deck every day from 8 am to 5 pm, counting the raptors passing over and in the vicinity. Along with your guide, they will explain how raptor

migration takes place, and how to count literally tens of thousands of raptors passing by, along with the ecological importance of surveying migrating hawks. Depending on the direction of the winds, the raptor migration can be fantastic over the Canopy Tower, or if the winds are not in our favor, then we can venture to Ancon Hill in Panama City, the highest hill in the metropolitan area, where Panama Audubon counts the migrating hawks and vultures from their observatory. On a good day, the numbers here are outstanding! Over two million birds have been known to pass over in one day during the peak of the season. Our schedule will remain rather flexible to the migration conditions to make the most of this natural spectacle! PM: Raptor Migration Workshop & Ammo Ponds (15 min. from Canopy Tower) This afternoon we will spend some time learning about raptor migration and hawk identification. This group of fascinating birds can present some identification challenges, and our Raptor Migration ID workshop will cover raptor migration basics, raptor ID, how raptors migrate, where they go, raptor migration hotspots & flyways, raptor migration in Panama and the importance of counting migrating raptors. This will give you a great introduction to what we will be experiencing during the week at the Canopy Tower. The Ammo Dump Ponds are located just past Gamboa on the way to Pipeline Road. It is the best place to see the elusive White-throated Crake, as well as a host of other waterbirds. Least Grebes and Purple Gallinules are common, and Rufescent Tiger-Heron and Ringed Kingfisher are also resident. Here, we often find Greater Ani, Red-legged Honeycreeper, Whooping Motmot (recent split from Blue-crowned), Yellow-tailed Oriole, Southern Lapwing, Yellow-crowned Tyrannulet, Tropical Kingbird, Scrub Greenlet, Lesser Kiskadee, Black-bellied Whistling-Duck and Panama, Social & Rusty-margined flycatchers and even American Pygmy Kingfisher! Birding here will be excellent, as we add to our impressive list of birds. Dinner at CANOPY TOWER. Day 3 World Famous Pipeline Road FULL DAY (20 min. from Canopy Tower) After breakfast we board the Birdmobile or the Tinamu, both open-air vehicles, that take you to Pipeline Road, the best place in Central Panama to find forest birds, and one of the premier birding spots in the world! Pipeline Road is a great place for raptors. Three forest-falcons are resident and Tiny Hawk, Semiplumbeous Hawk, Ornate & Black Hawk-Eagles may be seen, and we will keep our eyes on the skies overhead for migrants passing over the Caribbean slope. As well as the raptors there are eight species of wrens, five trogons, four puffbirds, three motmots, several tanagers, Great Jacamar, Common Potoo and Pheasant Cuckoo; Greater Ani, Gray-necked Wood-Rail and Gray-headed Chachalaca; Forest Elaenia, Panama Flycatcher, Blue Ground-Dove, Little Tinamou and many other birds have been recorded here, including the elusive Rufous-vented Ground-Cuckoo and the majestic Harpy Eagle! And if its 17 km are not enough, there's plenty of side trails, plus 11 creeks and rivers that can be followed into the forest. We will also search for Streak-chested Antpitta and Black-faced Antthrush. Army ant swarms are found frequently, attended by a host of birds including, Bicolored, Ocellated & Spotted antbirds. Plus, we will look for Golden-collared, Red-capped & Blue-crowned manakins, always enjoyed by birders. Purplethroated Fruitcrow, Black-crowned & Masked tityras, Cinnamon & Crimson-crested woodpeckers, Scarlet-rumped Cacique, Red-lored & Brown-hooded parrots, Collard Araçari, Black-mandibled & Keel-

billed toucans, Black-striped, Northern Barred & Plain Brown woodcreepers may be found to name a few! We will enjoy a picnic lunch in the forest. The afternoon holds more birding in store for us as we move deeper into the forest before returning back to the CANOPY TOWER for dinner. Day 4 AM: Raptor Watch: Metropolitan Park & Ancon Hill (25 min. from Canopy Tower) "Metro Park," encompassing 265 hectares, has the distinction of being the only large forested park within a metropolitan capital in Latin America. More importantly, it protects 192 hectares of Dry Lowland Pacific Forest, yielding bird species that are difficult to find elsewhere. We will start our morning here with some high-quality birding! The beautiful Rosy Thrush-Tanager is here, as is the striking Lance-tailed Manakin. It's also a good place to find Southern Bentbill, Rufous-and-white, Plain & Rufous-breasted wrens, Dusky Antbird, Crimson-crested, Lineated & Red-crowned woodpeckers. Plaincolored, Palm, Blue-gray & Golden-hooded tanagers are common; Red-legged & Green honeycreepers, Whooping Motmot (recent split from Blue-crowned), Keel-billed Toucan, Collared Araçari and the endemic Yellow-green Tyrannulet are resident along with Forest & Greenish elaenias. The Central American Agouti, a rainforest rodent, is often seen here, too. A mirador along Mono Titi trail is a good spot to witness the mass migration of thousands of Turkey Vultures, Swainson's & Broad-winged hawks as they fly over Panama City toward their wintering grounds in South America. Once the thermals start forming by mid morning, we will head over to Ancon Hill, where several overlooks from this promontory yield excellent views of the city as well as the hawk migration! Lunch at CANOPY TOWER. PM: Summit Ponds & Old Gamboa Road (10 minutes from Canopy Tower) Old Gamboa Road and the associated ponds at Summit are great places to find a wide variety of Canal Area birds. At Summit Ponds, we will scan for Green, Striated, Capped & Boat-billed herons as well as Green, Ringed, Amazon, Green-and-rufous (rare) & American Pygmy kingfishers, which are all resident here! Also we seek out Rusty-margined & Streaked flycatchers, Lesser & Great kiskadees, Greater Ani, Mangrove Swallow, Bat Falcon, Cocoa Woodcreeper and Lineated Woodpecker. Going straight past the two ponds we'll be on Old Gamboa Road, one of the birdiest spots around. This road passes through a variety of habitats and has plenty of specialties, including Blue Ground-Dove, Great Antshrike, Jet Antbird, Black-tailed, Bran-colored & Royal flycatchers, Lance-tailed & Golden-collared manakins and the delightful Rosy Thrush-Tanager! We also hope to find species like White-bellied Antbird, Yellow-bellied Elaenia, Yellow-backed Oriole, Boat-billed & Fork-tailed flycatchers, Yellow-headed Caracara, Crane Hawk, Black-chested Jays and more. Also resident are Gray-headed Chachalaca, with Spectacled Owl a real possibility, too, as the guides know where they often roost. Dinner at CANOPY TOWER. Day 5 AM: Panama Rainforest Discovery Center (30 minutes from Canopy Tower) Today we will start with an early breakfast then head back to Pipeline Road to spend the morning at the Panama Rainforest Discovery Center. This facility owned by the Avifauna Foundation is a fantastic place to see a wide variety of forest birds and raptors during the migration season. We will explore its wellmaintained trails and climb the new, well-constructed, spiral metal tower, which takes you above the

rainforest canopy. From the top of the tower, there are plenty of opportunities to see some different canopy species including White-necked Puffbird, Blue Cotinga, Black-mandibled Toucan, a few species of trogons, pigeons, parrots and more. Resident raptors are commonly seen up here, including Grayheaded Kite, White Hawk, Double-toothed Kite and Semiplumbeous Hawk. If the winds are favorable for migration, expect to see some raptors overhead on their way down south (an exploratory count site ran here for a few years which logged some significant raptor flights). At the covered visitor s center, we watch hummers feeding at point-blank range and other birds in the surrounding shrubbery and trees; there is also a small gift shop with snacks and restroom are available. Lunch at CANOPY TOWER. PM: Gamboa Resort & Chagres River (20 minutes from Canopy Tower) After lunch, we take a short drive to Chagres River and the accompanying fields & forest. First, we must stop at the Canopy Bed & Breakfast in the picturesque village of Gamboa, to look at the bird feeders! With a beautiful backdrop of Cerro Pelado, the backyard at the Canopy B&B is teeming with bird life. At the fruit feeders, we are likely to see Red-legged, Shining & Green honeycreepers, Flame-rumped, Crimson-backed & Blue-gray tanagers, Thick-billed Euphonia, Yellow-bellied & Variable seedeaters, Whooping Motmot and Gray-headed Chachalaca. Next, we're off to the Chagres River, the main tributary for the Panama Canal. The birding along the riverbanks and the forest edges of Gamboa Resort can be spectacular! Here, we search for Amazon, Green & American Pygmy kingfishers, as well as Whooping Motmot and Cinnamon Woodpecker. We could also see Gray-Necked Wood-Rail, Cocoi, Green & Striated Herons, Wattled Jacana, Pied-billed Grebe, Anhinga, Royal & Sandwich Terns, Brown Pelican, Neotropic Cormorant, Tricolored & Little Blue Herons, Rufescent Tiger-Heron, Mangrove Swallow, Black-chested Jay, Lesser Kiskadee, Rusty-margined Flycatcher, Yellow-billed Cacique, Blackbellied & Buff-breasted wrens, Fasciated & Barred Antshrikes, Cinnamon Becard, Slaty-tailed Trogon, White-bellied Antbird, and even Collared Forest-Falcon and Blue Cotinga at times! After first taking a last look for raptors from the Observation Deck, we enjoy dinner at the CANOPY TOWER. Day 6 Cerro Azul FULL DAY (1.5 hours from Canopy Tower) After an early breakfast, we depart toward the hills above Tocumen where a completely different climate and, more importantly, a different suite of birds await! The weather will be much cooler & breezier as we ascend the foothills of the San Blas Mountains toward Cerro Azul (2,500 ft.) and Cerro Jefe (3,300 ft.), named after the two tall peaks in the area. Major targets in these cloud-forested hills with peaks of elfin forest will include Yellow-eared Toucanet, Black-and-white Hawk-Eagle, Ornate Hawk-Eagle, Spot-crowned Barbet, Black-eared Wood-Quail, and a nice mix of tanagers, including Silverthroated, Emerald, Speckled, Rufous-winged, Bay-headed, Black-and-yellow, Golden-hooded and Hepatic. We can also search for the specialty hummers, including Rufous-crested Coquette, Whitetipped Sicklebill, Bronze-tailed Plumeleteer, Green Thorntail, as well as Violet-capped, Violet-headed & Snowy-bellied hummingbirds! We should also find the endemic Stripe-cheeked Woodpecker, along with Lineated Woodpecker, Black-striped & Spotted woodcreepers, Red-capped & White-ruffed manakins, Russet Antshrike, and White-vented & Tawny-capped euphonias. Oftentimes, we find flocks of Swallowtailed Kites! And of course, we will keep our eyes open for migrating raptors. We have lunch at a picturesque residence overlooking miles of Chagres National Park's impressive rainforest! Later, while enjoying dinner at the CANOPY TOWER, we all will reminisce on the day's glorious birds!

Day 7 AM: Canopy Tower Observation Deck/Ancon Hill This is our last morning to fully take advantage of the raptor migration in Panama. Depending on the winds and weather conditions, we can focus our morning on the raptors from the Observation Deck of the Canopy Tower, or make a final trip to Ancon Hill to experience the migration from the Pacific side. While we watch the thousands of Turkey Vultures and Swainson s Hawks funneling through, we will keep our eyes open for the odd Peregrine Falcon, Merlin or if lucky, Northern Harrier or Red-tailed Hawk to pass by, always an exciting find during hawk migration in Panama. Lunch at CANOPY TOWER. PM: Miraflores Locks at the Panama Canal (20 minutes from Canopy Tower) No trip to Panama is complete without a visit to the Panama Canal! The Miraflores Locks at the Pacific entrance to the Canal is the second largest set of locks on this magnificent 100-year old feat of engineering. Here, you can watch huge ocean liners transit the Panama Canal from two observation decks, offering great photo opportunities, and learn about its history, operations, markets and future in the 4-floor museum in the visitor s center. Of course, bring your binoculars; often this is a great place to watch the raptor migration! We will return to the Canopy Tower in time to enjoy sunset from the Observation Deck. Dinner at CANOPY TOWER. Day 8 Departure No need to wake up early today. After a leisurely breakfast and some last-minute birding around the Canopy Tower, we will head back to Panama City and catch our return flights home! Please note that this itinerary may change slightly in order or locations visited due to weather, changes in habitat or other conditions.