Cabo de Palos
lighthouse garden
Weather: Sky 2/8 cloud, wind SW F2-3, temp.15ºC.
10:15 – 11:40.
A later
start and a brighter day today, so I decided to make it a 'photographic' day - ambling around and trying to take photos of anything I could get close enough to. Walking
into the lighthouse garden there were 3 Spotted Flycatchers together, and a
Woodchat on the fence. Further into the
garden, a female Common Whitethroat, but that was it. In the ‘Sirio’ gardens next to the car park,
there were a couple of Melodious Warblers, one very photogenic, and a couple more Woodchats, 2 Willow
Warblers and a Robin.
The first bird I saw in the garden, this Spotted Flycatcher
Followed by this Woodchat Shrike
Just to show I've nothing against the commoner residents, A House Sparrow!
A rather photogenic Melodious Warbler
Another shot of the same bird, showing quite a large pale wing panel
And another - but this time showing a rounded head and brown legs - definitely Melodious!
Species seen/heard
Yellow
Legged Gull (Larus michahellis)
Audouin’s
Gull (Larus audouinii)
Collared
Dove (Streptopelia decaocto)
White
Wagtail (Motacilla alba alba)
Blackbird (Turdus merula)
Robin (erythacus rubecula)
Spotted Flycatcher (Muscicapa striata)
Common Whitethroat (Sylvia communis)
Sardinian
Warbler (Sylvia melanocephala)
Melodious Warbler (Hippolais polyglotta)
Willow Warbler (Phylloscopus trochilus)
Woodchat Shrike (Lanius senator)
Spotless
Starling (Sturnus unicolor)
House
Sparrow (Passer domesticus)
Marchamalo Salinas
(La Manga)
Weather: Sky 2/8 cloud, wind SW F2 - 3, temp. 15 - 19ºC. 11:50 – 13:25.
On the way
back from Cabo de Palos I called in firstly at the La Manga side of the Salinas (below the go-kart
track). There were no waders, but over
the mimosa grove there was a continuous passage of Pallid Swifts, Swallows and
House Martins. In the mimosas
themselves, I flushed a Turtle Dove and had 3 Spotted Flycatchers, a single
Woodchat Shrike and Willow Warbler. On the open fields beyond the mimosas, a Short-toed
Lark was singing.
I found all
the waders round at the ‘Playa Paraiso’ side of the Salinas.
In the westernmost lagoon, a group of 15 Curlew Sandpipers, many in
breeding plumage, 6 Dunlin, 2 Redshank, 13 Sanderling and in total 62 Little
Stint. In nearby lagoons were 45
Shelducks, 18 Slender-billed Gulls and 35 Avocets. There was no sign of the Flamingos seen
yesterday.
Seen on every visit these days, one of several Kentish Plover
Not so common, Sanderling are normally only around for a few days
The mixed group of waders are quite flighty - here seen Curlew Sandpiper, Dunlin, Kentish and Little Stint
The Curlew Sandpipers are quite colourful at this time of year
The Little Stints aren't bad either
Species seen/heard
Shelduck
(Tadorna tadorna)
Kestrel
(Falco tinnunculus)
Little
Egret (Egretta garzetta)
Little
Ringed Plover (Charadrius dubius)
Kentish
Plover (Charadrius alexandrinus)
Black
Winged Stilt (Himantopus Himantopus)
Avocet
(Recurvirostra avosetta)
Sanderling (Calidris alba)
Redshank
(Tringa tetanus)
Little Stint (Calidris minuta)
Curlew Sandpiper (Calidris ferruginea)
Slender-billed
Gull (Larus genei)
Yellow-legged
Gull (Larus michahellis)
Turtle Dove (Streptopelia turtur)
Pallid Swift (Apus pallidus)
Bee-eater (Merpos apiaster)
Monk
Parakeet ((Myiopsitta monachus)
Short-toed Lark (Calandrella brachydactyla)
Blue-headed Wagtail (Motacilla flava iberiae)
Swallow (Hirundo rustica)
House Martin (Delichon urbicum)
Spotted Flycatcher (Muscicapa striata)
Sardinian
Warbler (Sylvia melanocephala)
Willow Warbler (Phylloscopus trochilus)
Fan-tailed
Warbler (Cisticola juncidis)
Woodchat Shrike (Lanius senator)
Corn
Bunting (Miliaria calandra)
Marchamalo Salinas (La Manga) & Cabo de Palos lighthouse garden.
Weather: Sky 3 - 7/8 cloud, rain
later, wind SW F2, temp. 19ºC. 17:30 – 19:25.
In the
afternoon I went back to the Salinas (the mimosas area), just to check if
anything else had dropped in (and also, because there is a good group of Taray
trees there which I have found to be the favorite habitat for Wood Warblers on
migration, to see if they had arrived yet as they should be here any day
now). I drew a blank with the Wood
Warblers, but new in were a male and female Pied Flycatcher.
As I was
over that way, I decided to have another look at the lighthouse garden (even
though it’s Sunday and the place likely to be overrun with tourists). In the 5 or so minutes it took to get there,
a menacing dark cloud came over, and many people were running for their cars.
In the
garden itself, there obviously had been some movement, as I had in total 6
Spotted Flycatcher, 2 Pied Flycatcher, a male Subalpine Warbler (the first for
a couple of days), a Common Whitethroat, Nightingale, Woodchat Shrike, Willow
Warbler and 2 Melodious Warblers. I
didn’t manage to cover the whole area as it started to rain (and didn’t look
like it was likely to stop anytime soon) so I decided to get back to the car
and home.
Definitely a day for Spotted Flycatrchers today
And in the afternoon, a few Pied Flycatchers as well