From: James Bradley <james_bradley@ymail.com>
Date: 2019-05-12 16:54
Subject: Re: [KENYABIRDSNET] Birding North of Garissa

Hi Chege,

Thanks for sharing this excellent report and photographs. It is certainly an interesting area that few people get to visit. The Bafirawiri does seem to have odd tail-lifting habits not shared by other Pale Flycatcher subspecies, but it also has the classic soft facial expression of a Pale Flycatcher. I wonder if the song and calls are the same voice as Pale Flycatcher?

Given the extraordinary photographs of the mystery bird, I think it would also be valuable if you could recall the exact location and coordinates of the sighting, to add to this thread for the Kenyabirdsnet archives. I have no doubt that birders heading out that way for Collared Lark in the future, might be be very interested in searching for your mystery bird.

Best Wishes,

James



James Bradley
Sannichton, British Columbia
(778) 677-2900


On Sunday, May 12, 2019, 2:26:41 a.m. PDT, Brian Finch birdfinch@gmail.com [kenyabirdsnet] <kenyabirdsnet-noreply@yahoogroups.com> wrote:


 

Hi Chege,
That's a superb report, with many gems. The Bafirawari Flycatcher
images superb. They bring the tail right over the back like a
Scrub-Robin, neither inland Pale or the smaller coastal Pale which is
also a possible separate species, do this.

Intrigued by the Somali Sparrows north of Garissa, are they nominate
without any trace of yellow and do you have any images? Following the
recent confirmation that Itai, Ben Mugambe and I made that they were
still at Archer's Post, I prepared a submission to the East African
Rarities Committee to get nominate Somali Sparrow getting recognised
as occurring in Kenya as at present it isn't. From your description it
sounds like Somali is going to be a successful invader and stiff
competition for the House Sparrows in the sub-desert. We had no Somali
Sparrows at all on our trips, but the thought that they could occur
had not entered anyone's heads as a remote possibility until they were
found at Shaba Gate! Now we might be in for a major incursion and
people should check through the sparrow flocks, they could already be
widespread along the coast. If you have some images, I would like to
add them as an addition to the submission to extend the currently
limited range of nominate birds.

Your mystery bird, well it's a mystery to me as well. I will really
have to have closer looks at the images, there is something oddly
babbler-like about the bill, it could equally suggest starling or an
insectivorous weaver, from initial glances I haven't a clue but will
have a good look. Is it multiple individuals or one off, habitat,
habits, size and most resembles?
Best for now
Brian

On 5/11/19, 'chege wa kariuki' chege@birdwatchingeastafrica.com
[kenyabirdsnet] <kenyabirdsnet-noreply@yahoogroups.com> wrote:
> Dear birders
>
> Some 3 days before the e-Bird’s Global Birding Day (4th May) a friend and I
> thought we should go to north of Garissa in search of a Collared Lark and
> other birds that would not be recorded by others. We were to leave
> afternoon of 3rd as both of us were busy but the last minute he changed his
> mind sighting of insecurity as a thought. So there was no way I could go up
> there alone. At around 6pm I decided then I would go to Mwea National
> Reserve and the best was to go spend the night there and have an easy start
> the day after. So by 7pm I was on the road. Along the way I thought may be
> birding this road to Garissa Town would for sure offer quite a few more
> super species than Mwea. Check if the Red-naped Bush Shrike are still on
> the
> road. And so I drove further spending the night at Mwingi arriving at
> 930pm..
>
>
> Sometimes in the middle of the night something told me no….try go north of
> Garissa. So I woke up at 4am and left.
>
>
>
> When the morning light was on I started birding somewhere past Bangali and
> Garissa. Stopping any place I thought it looked good till around noon when
> I
> arrived Garissa. Along the many stops I made the only raptors I say were 1
> Black-winged Kite that I saw on my way back at the same spot, an Eastern
> Chanting Goshawk and 2 Pygmy Falcons. I had never seen a flock of about 40
> Cut Throats before; feeding on the ground with the Red-billed Quileas.
> Eastern Yellow-billed Hornbill appeared almost in every small somali
> manyattas along the road. My first bird of the days was a Comb Duck flying
> alongside the car for a few seconds. Buff-crested Bustard calling from the
> bushes. Not far from Garissa there were quite a number of Acacia
> turnbulliana (which is the habitat you’d find or expect a Collared Lark)
> and none seen but also the soil type was softer clay and not sandy red..
>
>
>
> Two Egyptian Geese were seen pas Garissa past the town and 2 more on a road
> side water pool about 70 km north of Garissa. The first flock of Vulturine
> Guineafowls was some 20km past Garissa on the turn off to Mado Gashe and
> road to Liboi about 30 birds next to a small trading centre at the junction
> where there were a 5 Feral Pigeons feeding by the police road block, a
> Cattle Egret and 1 Sacred Ibis. Mourning Collared-Dove were in good numbers
> but while watching one at a trading centre some 20km south of Mado Gashe
> dropped on the ground from a tree, kicking the legs for a few seconds and
> died. Talking to the local they said it’s been happening. I did pick the
> carcass and now it’s with the NMK’s Ornithology Department just incase they
> wanted to undertake some lab test.
>
> Also were a few Ring-necked Dove and Laughing Dove compared to others while
> only 3 Speckled Pigeons were seen. Once in a while, while driving a Namaqua
> Dove or two would fly across the road and others seen on the water pools.
>
>
>
> Was pretty dry but there were these little pockets of water pools along
> the
> road showing some signs of rains some days ago and hence some Black-faced &
> Chestnut-bellied Sandgrouses, 3 Wood Sandpiper, Spur-winged Lapwing and on
> one pool 3 marabou’s Storks. Black-headed Lapwing were seen before Garissa
> and after and a family of 5 with two thet looked subadults. A flock of over
> 100 Little Swifts at the Tana River bridge at Garissa town and quite a few
> African Palm-Swift. Crowned Lapwing were seen 3 times along the road and
> Black-headed Lapwings seemed the commonest of the genus. Blue-naped
> Mousebird, Von der Decken's Hornbill and few Northern Red-billed Hornbill,
> only a pair of Somali Bee-eaters were seen some around 80km North of
> Garissa.
>
>
>
> 3 late Blue-cheeked Bee-eaters were feeding by powerline before Garissa.
> Only 1 Lilac-breasted, 1 Eurasian & 1 Rufous-crowned Roller not far from
> each other were seen before Garissa town. Black-throated Barbet would call
> all along from Bangali all the way to my last stop which was about 15km to
> Madogashe. Only a pair of Cardinal Woodpecker but aA few sighting and
> calls
> of Nubian Woodpecker. Pygmy Batis were quite common by calls but had this
> pair of Eastern Black-headed Batis and who were singing. Brubru’scall was
> quite a common after every few stops but Pringle's Puffback called most
> places and you could hear them even when driving. Two sightings of
> Red-naped
> Bushshrike both before arriving to Garissa and on the north of Garissa..
> Rosy-patched Bushshrike were located only 3 times but were vocal in many
> places.
>
>
>
> And so the migrants seen during the two days were 3 Blue-cheeked
> Bee-eaters,
> 1 Eurasian Roller, ½ dozen Barn Swallows, 2 Common Whitethroats, 1 Lesser
> Gray Shrike, 3 Wood Sandpipers, 2 Willow Warblers.
>
>
>
> 1 Taita Fiscal was seen west of Garissa and no Somali Fiscal was seen. 2
> flocks of Northern White-crowned Shrike North of Garissa, Fork-tailed
> Drongo
> were common one with very pale windows on the wing and quite very short
> fork. Pied Crows in every other small trading centres, I think 3 groups of
> Chestnut-headed Sparrow-Lark, Pink-breasted Larks were very common and sang
> or whistled quite often. No Collared Lark was seen but I might have heard
> one on my way back to Garissa around 1830hrs but could not locate since it
> sounded far inside the bush and the sun was disappearing and I didn’t want
> to get lost in the bushes at that time while I was still 70km to Garissa
> town. While I was further north this place had some showers. So I marked
> the
> place and the following day I went back and tried calling and walking
> through the bushes and none was seen or heard. It was a good site Acacia
> turnbulliana were in numbers but without locating a single bird and they
> were seemed quite common and available on every trip I’ve been there
> including the two trip with Brian Finch and others then I doubted my single
> whistle I heard of the lark and pulled it out of the list
>
>
>
> The road is now all superbly tarmacked and about to reach Mado Gashe, 1
> Sombre Greenbul was singing while crossing the bridge in Garissa town.
> Dodson’s Bulbuls were seen but only about 3 times.
>
> A pair of Somali Crombec were seen and located each day but quite common
> was Northern Crombec. I kept an eye for Phillipa’s Crombec ( a bird Brian
> Finch thought might be in Kenya since the distribution comes to the border
> of Kenya and Somali but only recorded in Somali) So I did try look and
> locate each crombec I would hear. Only 1 pair of Yellow-vented Eremomela
> were seen, a few calls of Grey Wren-Warbler while Pale Prinia were common
> together Red-fronted Warblers.
>
>
>
> I somehow lost my attention of flycatchers to searching for the lark and at
> last can’t figure out who was commoner between the Grey and
> Bafirawari/Wajir
> Flycather but observing a few times the Wajir I realized he liked to pump
> up
> the tail to an extent like a Red-fronted Warbler or Tawny-flanked
> Prinia…..a
> habit I cannot recal seeing while we were up there………..Ebird has it as a
> full species when logging but after it does count it as Pale Flycatcher.
>
> White-browed Scrub Robin were as usual very common and vocal.
> Golden-breasted Starling weren’t as common as before and Superb Starlings
> were the very commonest bird to encounter. Not a single Shelly’s Starling
> was seen reminding me of a trip with three Swedish birders up there and
> Collared Lark was pretty common and singing and presumably more than 500
> Shelly’s Starling in flocks of 50s. This was in Dec and the rains were good
> with over 100 individual Grasshopper Buzzards.
>
> Fischer's Starling were common. Eastern Violet-backed Sunbird and Hunter's
> Sunbirds with White-bellied version of Variable Sunbird being commoner
> thank
> any other sunbird.
>
> About 3 sightings of male Northern Grosbeak-Canaries. Somali Bunting.
>
>
>
> House Sparrow were seen in Garissa and hybrid of House Sparrow and Somali
> at
> Shimbir Trading Centre. However, at least a few Somali Sparrow were present
> in every small trading centre and a few feeding closer to those nomadic
> Somali Manyattas. Atleast on the second trip with Brian Finch, Ben Mugambi,
> Itai Shanni among others in 2009 I cannot remember any of the Somali
> Sparrows and this time they were present and commoner. I bet had I checked
> every sparrows in Garissa there might have been some already there.
> Parrot-billed Sparrow were quite common in pair or 3-4 birds.
> Yellow-spotted
> Petronia, Red-billed Buffalo-Weaver seen feeding along the road and a place
> past Bangali where they are nesting on a pylon. White-headed
> Buffalo-Weaver..
> White-browed Sparrow-Weaver were not as common compared to other habitats
> they are found. Black-capped Social-Weaver were only seen on one tree
> where
> they were nest building north of Garissa. Red-billed Quelea were probably
> around 100 individuals.
>
>
>
> 3 pairs of Green-winged Pytilia , about 15 Gray-headed Silverbills which
> seems not recorded in Garissa and the east but recorded right on the border
> of Kenya and Somali on the Somali side.
>
> Others birds seen after the global birding day included African Bare-eyed
> Thrush, Wattled Starling, Somali Tit, Abyssinian Scimitarbill, Lesser
> Masked
> Weaver, Tsavo Sunbird.
>
>
>
> There was also a birds similar to a Northern Brownbul but wing pattern of
> rufous edging like a whitethroat. Could not tell what it was and never got
> a
> chance to photograph. They were two birds. Then one bird that I
> photographed
> but I cannot put a name on it. Looked size and shape like a Donaldson-Smith
> Sparrow-Weaver or even size of a petronia (or slightly bigger) but smaller
> than a buffalo weaver and Fischer’s Starling that weren’t very far., this
> bird once flew and patched inside the bush and came out. The bill looked
> strong but not as strong a buffalo-weaver and not as thin as the Fischer’s
> starling. Flicking the wing and the tail like a petronia on patching, all
> the belly, chest and throat was white and seemed to have no contrast. I had
> the bird for about a minute. It’s attached.
>
>
>
> Weirdly, Desert Warthog were common in every trip I did up there but this
> time there was none but there were, a single Reticulated Giraffe, Gerenuk,
> Dikdik??????, Unstriped Ground Squirrel and a pari of African Wild Cats.
> For
> not seeing a single Collared Lark I would still be interested to go again
> and a bit north may be Black-billed Scimitarbill (which would be a lifer)
> might be present there.
>
>
>
> Many thanks and best wishes
>
> chege
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
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