Thursday 27 October 2022

Picathartes!

This time last week, I was watching a Black Sparrowhawk in Atewa Forest, on the final day of a 17-day birding tour of Ghana, organised and guided by Kalu Afasi of Malimbe Tours.  Appropriately, we got to see all four of the Ghanaian malimbes, which are red and black, forest-dwelling members of the weaver family, but the main target bird of any trip to Ghana is the White-necked Rockfowl, aka Yellow-headed Picathartes or the bird that time forgot.  Seeing a picathartes means a long hike through the forest to their nesting/roosting boulder and then sitting and waiting for them to arrive, usually late in the afternoon and just as it is getting dark.  We only had to wait about half an hour for the first one to appear but that didn't stay for long, then two birds appeared just as the heavens opened.  Having gotten satisfying looks at them and a couple of grainy pictures with what little light remained, we got up and sheltered under the boulder from the pouring rain.  One of the picathartes then hopped onto the viewing bench and sat there watching us in a surreal, tables turned situation!


The sparrowhawk was the final and 190th new bird of the trip, during which I saw a total of 347 species and heard another 23.  The main focus was on seeing as many species as possible so I didn't take many photo's but will be posting some of them during December in my yearly online advent calendar.