Sunday, July 7, 2019

Extreme Birding in Barangay Eden, Davao City

This session was supposed to be just like the usual, but Pete Simpson took us to a whole new level of birding, this time bringing us extra higher than expected. I never thought that would go down as a minor trekking in a dense forest of Eden Toril but the output was extraordinary, perhaps the best in my entire birding life. After about 4 months of not being able to do mountain trekking this one was a refresher of sort and it was quite strenuous because I had to stay awake the whole night before to attend to the wake of a photography mentor Tatay Rene Lumawag before I left downtown very early in the morning on July 6 to catch up with the Big Year team. 

Pete and I left Matina 7-Eleven store by 5:00 in the morning and drove to Eden with Alden, Tonton and Jong in the other car of Alden. After settling for a short briefing by Pete and meeting with our guide Minoy we started the cold trekking first to the Army detachment for a courtesy visit and to inform the personnel there of the session that lasted more or less 10 hours. Coordination with law enforcement agencies and local government units is crucial in any birding activity especially if the site is a forested mountain range similar to that of Eden and other mountainous sites in Mindanao. Along the way just minutes after the jump off we stopped momentarily to witness Cryptic Flycatcher, a rare commodity which is familiar in Eden and a lifer for Jong.

The first kilometers of trekking are farmlands of community in Eden but the trail right off the detachment was a sheer assault where we stood a little longer to observe activities of Whiskered Flowerpecker, Philippine Pygmy Woodpecker, Cinnamon Ibon, Torquise Flycatcher, Fire-breasted Flowerpecker and Buzzing Flowerpecker in a partly-forested 800 masl site. From the record we had in this spot I could even consider that was already a good session of two lifers for me and maybe Tonton.
  
Whiskered Flowerpecker
Hard Shot of a Cinnamon Ibon
Fire-breasted Flowerpecker

Turquoise Flycatcher
Philippine Pygmy Woodpecker
Another Shot of a Philippine Pygmy Woodpecker
Philippine Pygmy Woodpeckers
But there was even a lot in store for us in the next sites. We could have just taken the much-easier route but the flowerpeckers deserved some knee strains. Further up I asked Minoy to target a water source because I did not bring one, this time realizing (again) not to underestimate the mountain. In search for water brought us to a little hut with some Mountain White Eyes and another solitary Buzzing Flowerpecker before we could reach the trail of pine trees where Tonton and Pete requested for trekking pole to increase hiking performance. The next stop was at an abandoned purok near a water source where several good species were seen like the Coppersmith Barbet, Philippine Bulbul, Tawny Grassbird and Stripe-breasted Rhabdornis. The frustrating part here was the feather leftovers of a butchered bird which I think was a Common Emerald Dove.


Mountain White Eye
Buzzing Flowerpecker
Stripe-breasted Rhabdornis
 Minoy told me we still had to trek a little further to get inside the forest where we were greeted with flock of the Mindanao endemic Black and Cinnamon Fantail, a familiar bird species I saw every time I climb Mt. Apo. From this site (1,200 masl) also had us face to face with the Yellow-bellied Whistler, another Philippine endemic dwelling in the highlands of region XI. The trail we followed up was a track of water pipe connecting its source to the community of barangay Eden. As our trekking became more intense we observed different vegetation highlighted by giant palm trees and some striking and vibrant flora and fauna. At a denser environment a flock of Mountain White Eyes also settled in harmony with the Negros Leaf Warbler, Mindanao White Eye, Sulphur-billed Nuthatch, Long-tailed Bush Warbler, Bundok Flycatcher and the Mindanao endemic Grey-hooded Sunbird.
  
Black and Cinnamon Fantail
Yellow-bellied Whistler
Forest Snail
Green-crested Lizard
Green Phasmatodea
Brown Phasmatodea
Grey-hooded Sunbird
Mindanao White Eye
Negros Leaf Warbler
By 11:00 AM we are nearing the campsite were we estimated to take our lunch (although I only had single bread, thanks to my good friends for giving me extra stuff, making that lunch a bit of a buffet). Plenty of doves flying around the canopy were unidentified, at least few of them. I spotted Philippine Cuckoo Dove and heard some calls of Amethyst Brown Dove. Buff-spotted Flameback was seen as well, and a couple of Mindanao Raquet-tails crisscrossing with Philippine Falconets.  After a good lunch I took a nap in a log covered by Minoy with fern leaves, to the delight of Tonton and Alden, even before we heard a call of Crested Honey Buzzard which later on we saw behind thick fogs. We expected presence of Apo Myna in the campsite but the bird never appeared this time, leaving it one of the most elusive birds in my list other than the Philippine Eagle. 


It was almost 2:00 in the afternoon when we left the campsite and when we got back to the purok there was some threat of rain. A fog-covered trek down using a different trail to the jump off was good enough but this time we never escaped from a moderate downpour, thank you Pete for lending me your extra umbrella. Overall it was a cool session with 50 great species of resident and endemic birds which, according to Pete a consolation of sort because most of the birds in this time of the year are in breeding mode.

No comments:

Post a Comment