My
first climb in Mt. Apo this year happened on January 24-25, one week before
mountaineering in Sta. Cruz trail formally opens in February. I was with two
guests from Davao City whom I permitted to join with me to do familiarization
tour for its future undertaking with my office. With them were equally good
accredited mountain guides Clyde and Michael. My colleague Froilan completed
that 6-man cast of that expedition to the highest peak in a rainy occasion with
Typhoon Amang still in its last phase within the Philippine Area of
Responsibility.
|
Black and Cinnamon Fantail |
I
was picked up by the group from Davao City at about 5:00 in the morning and
travelled to Kapatagan in an hour. After a short breakfast we headed to
Baruring (jump off point) and started trekking by 8:00 AM. Just before we could
get to the midpoint of the vertical track in Desander I already noticed plenty
of small birds towards the northwestern part of sitio Colan near the Colan Blue
River and waterfalls. The best that I could identify were flock of Mountain White Eyes and winter migrants
Eyebrowed Thrush. These birds were
very hard to photograph as I was standing in a steep trail and it was quite far
with a bird location that was covered by huge trees.
|
Eyebrowed Thrush (Perching separately in distance from where I stood in Desander Trail) |
We
arrived in sitio Colan 15 minutes later and for 1 hour I conducted a brief
meeting with the porter community. I was delighted to see the porters after
almost 3 months, them being considered as part of my family already – the
Bagobo-Tagabawa community of barangay Sibulan. Before the porters could convene
majority of their members I roamed around and spotted common birds like Olive-backed Sunbirds, Brown Shrikes, Eurasian Tree Sparrows, Grey-streaked
Flycatcher, Collared Kingfisher and Red-keeled
Flowerpecker. Colan is 1,200 masl that hosts wide area of vegetable farms, that
is why special birds could rarely be seen.
|
The Porters of Sibulan Trail to Mt. Apo |
|
Brown Shrike in a Bamboo Tree |
|
Collared Kingfisher |
After
the meeting we started our hike through dense montane forest of Sibulan. It was
still raining very hard and instead of looking for birds I kept my camera and
focused on trekking as I targeted to arrive in the campsite earlier to avoid
getting extremely wet all throughout the trek. I and Froilan took a lunch break
in Big Rock E-camp and we were lucky the rain stopped in time when we arrived
in Tinikaran Camp 1. Tinikaran is a specie of endemic tree thriving well in Mt.
Apo particularly in Sibulan Trail. The campsite was christened after the tree
name because it is literally surrounded with tinikaran trees.
|
Tinikaran Trees |
Late
afternoon is best time for the birds to start coming out especially after a
heavy downpour. Just before my tent I saw numbers of the Philippine endemic Black and Cinnamon Fantail. The tall
trees in the camp gave me hardships in taking bird photos given with the
limitation of my camera. It is also in Tinikaran were the Little Pied Flycatcher could be seen all over the place. I revisited the common site of the
Everett’s White Eyes but they did not show up, instead, I saw tandem of Elegant Tits. I finished the afternoon
by simply listening to the bird sounds in Tinikaran camp. The birds really
provided smooth and soothing music that have been enriching my mind and soul.
All of their music was truly amazing.
|
Black and Cinnamon Fantail |
|
Black and Cinnamon Fantail |
|
Little Pied Flycatcher |
|
Elegant Tit |
|
Elegant Tit |
In the evening we had a
good chat with my guest Sir Bong and the rest of the company over bottle of
wine in a cold moment. That was coupled with some 90s alternative music I
played to round off the first day.
I resumed my birding
activity in the early morning of the second day while my two guests took off
their assault to the boulder face. I walked as far as Tinikaran 2 and as usual,
the birds were noticed more by their sounds, this time some Everett’s White Eyes were visible. Another
Philippine endemic showed up, this time the Yellow-bellied Whistler and more numbers of Elegant Tits, as well
as the Little Pied Flycatcher. As I hiked up the denser mossy forest of
Tinikaran I surprisingly saw a squirrel quickly crawled up a tree branch I
failed to photograph. Biodiversity is evidently flourishing in this part of Mt.
Apo.
|
Yellow-bellied Whistler |
|
Yellow-bellied Whistler |
When I got back to the
campsite for breakfast and packing up for descend I saw a Mountain-Verditer Flycatcher, a resident in the Philippines
dwelling 800 masl and higher. This bird, according to expert Birder Pete
Simpson, is now presently called Turquoise
Flycatcher. The unique blue color was amazing, which is excellent for a
lifer. Another bird appearing was a solitary Island Thrush spotted near the water source. This time also, more
and more Black and Cinnamon Fantail played around the entire camp canopy.
|
Turquoise Flycatcher |
|
Turquoise Flycatcher |
|
Turquoise Flycatcher |
|
Island Thrush |
|
Island Thrush |
Sir Bong and the group
came back early from the boulders and after a short high mountain snacks we
started moving back to the trail head. It was a quick downhill trekking and
when I reached the portion below Big Rock E-camp I saw a crawling bird. It was
never easy to identify and photograph because it roamed around the dark bushes
and other ground vegetation, its movement almost similar to the Philippine
Shortwing in Ang Tribung Bagobo Woodlands Resort last December. When I had it
consulted to Pete the bird is Long-tailed
Ground Warbler which happens to be an uncommon Philippine endemic recorded
only in Northern Luzon and Mindanao.
|
Not a good shot of a Long-tailed Ground Warbler |
Froilan was catching up
with me in Basakan while I enjoyed some good sites of Elegant Tits and some
lower elevation birds, most notable of them were Long-tailed Shrikes and Striated
Grassbird. Basakan is a critical site because it serves as buffer
separating Mt. Apo’s Multiple Use Zone and Strict Protection Zone. It is also
the site of the existing reforestation program of the DENR and Aboitiz Power
group. A short 1-kilometer stretch from Basakan is already an open area
comprising sitios of Garuc, Tumpis and down further Mamaon, Mareras and Pogpog.
|
Striated Grassbird |
|
Long-tailed Shrike |
|
Long-tailed Shrike |
It was already 11:00 in
the morning when I reached the farmlands of Tumpis. Some locals I caught
harvesting their cabbage. One farmer told me they have been crying foul over
the recent very low farm gate price of highland vegetables, a struggle usually
experienced by the farmers in almost all parts of Mt. Apo area. After a short
native coffee break with the farmers I continued trekking to Colan and leave
the group home ahead.
|
Farmers in Colan harvesting Cabbage |
My official record
accounts for 29 species but I am pretty sure it could have stretched to bigger
figure given with the sounds and unidentified seen species had my company of
Davao birders been there to join the hike.
The 2-day trekking
was quite fun and fruitful for me. This is the first time I visited Mt. Apo
since I bought my new birding camera. The peaceful place of Colan and Tumpis
are deafening to my ear which also gives tremendous reason for me to commune
every now and then with the mountain I call my own. The Bagobo-Tagabawa people
remains very accommodating and friendly, in fact always serving me food ration
and coffee every time I live there for days. Truly, there is only so much in Mt. Apo other
than trekking.
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