What's new
New posts
New media
New media comments
New profile posts
New review items
Latest activity
Forums
New posts
Search forums
Gallery
New media
New comments
Search media
Reviews
New items
Latest content
Latest reviews
Latest questions
Brands
Search reviews
Opus
Birds & Bird Song
Locations
Resources
Contribute
Recent changes
Blogs
Members
Current visitors
New profile posts
Search profile posts
ZEISS
ZEISS Nature Observation
The Most Important Optical Parameters
Innovative Technologies
Conservation Projects
Log in
Register
What's new
Search
Search
Search titles only
By:
New posts
Search forums
Menu
Log in
Register
Install the app
Install
BirdForum is the net's largest birding community dedicated to wild birds and birding, and is
absolutely FREE
!
Register for an account
to take part in lively discussions in the forum, post your pictures in the gallery and more.
Forums
Birding
Vacational Trip Reports
Bristol to Kagu ?
JavaScript is disabled. For a better experience, please enable JavaScript in your browser before proceeding.
You are using an out of date browser. It may not display this or other websites correctly.
You should upgrade or use an
alternative browser
.
Reply to thread
Message
<blockquote data-quote="Larry Sweetland" data-source="post: 1200765" data-attributes="member: 27337"><p><strong>Taman Negara</strong></p><p></p><p>Getting to Taman Negara was easy on public transport. We stayed for a week at the budget Tahan Guest House in the village, with the exception of one night in the Kumbang hide, some 13km into the jungle. Staying on the village side of the river means you miss the first half hour or so of daylight before being able to cross the river into the park, but you can squeeze in a coffee and roti telur by the jetty.</p><p></p><p>55 species were added to the trip in 7 days of birding, including some real crackers, but the birding came in extraordinary runs of very bad and very good luck. I guess I'm never going to understand the jungle.</p><p></p><p>The first day went pretty well, with a male <strong>Malaysian Blue Flycatcher </strong>and a rather approachable (too approachable ?) female <strong>Crestless Fireback </strong>appearing, both along what I ended up terming "the golden mile", the 3km stretch of trail along the Tahan between the camp ground and a wide stream by a wooden jetty. We ended up encountering the <strong>fireback </strong>a few times and called her The Lady. I hope she's ok, cos she appears to have lost it, poor love.</p><p></p><p>Now filled with optimism I figured I stood a good chance of seeing some of the 11 lifers for me that were in Frank Rheindt's 2003 trip report, if I went where he did. I called these birds "the German 1st XI". Over the next 3 days we birded around HQ area trails and headed out to the Kumbang hide and back. I don't think I've ever done so consistantly badly for such a long spell, anywhere! I defied probability by not seeing a single one of the XI. Six visits to the loop trail produced no <strong>peacock-pheasant</strong>. Everything that sounded interesting couldn't be seen, including a <strong>Malayan Peacock-Pheasant</strong> at the Kumbang hide and a presumed <strong>Short-toed Coucal </strong>half way back to HQ. Everything that looked interesting could not be got onto, or would only appear in full view briefly when my bins were steamed up! It was a nightmare. I guess we've all been there, but come on, for three whole days! I really felt like I might as well give up birding altogether and take up an entirely different hobby. Like taping things out for example. Just kidding <img src="data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAIAAAAAAAP///yH5BAEAAAAALAAAAAABAAEAAAIBRAA7" class="smilie smilie--sprite smilie--sprite2" alt=";)" title="Wink ;)" loading="lazy" data-shortname=";)" />. When we had returned sweaty,beaten, and covered in leech bites, to within 2km of HQ on the golden mile, our luck finally changed. A flushed bird actually landed nearby and was mostly visible. It was a <strong>Moustached Hawk-Cuckoo</strong>. Not one of the German 1st XI, but a new bird for me all the same. The curse was broken. </p><p></p><p>Next day I started with visit number 7 to the loop trail and saw a <strong>Malayan Peacock-Pheasant</strong>. Great start, though I must admit to thinking I better not delve too deeply into the life history of this bird or its forebears. I've a sneaky suspicion that the words "captive origin" and "reintroduction" might raise their heads. I currently feel that this bird and The Lady should perhaps reside in the S.A.D (sensed apparent dodginess) subsection of the S.A.D C.H.A.V. vestibule of my list. I then hit the golden mile, and hadn't gone 10m before a female <strong>Great Argus </strong>strutted slowly across the path in front of me. Wow! The next km brought incredible views of a male <strong>Diard's Trogon </strong>eating a green locust-like creature twice the size of it's head! Amazing. Before the end of the golden mile I'd also run into a male <strong>Banded Pitta </strong>and a couple of immense <strong>Helmeted Hornbills</strong>. A brief stop in the Tabing Hide produced brief views of a <strong>Blue-banded Kingfisher </strong>zipping by. Hmmm. Perhaps not really good enough views. It would have to sit there on the C.H.A.V. (could handle another view) bench in the S.A.D C.H.A.V. list vestibule. The birds kept throwing themselves at me,<strong> forktails </strong>stopped being sp, and started being stationary <strong>Chestnut-naped </strong>or <strong>White-crowned</strong>. Cool stuff like <strong>Lesser Green, Banded, Black & Red </strong>and <strong>Black & Yellow Broadbills</strong>, <strong>Black Magpies</strong>, and <strong>White-bellied Woodpecker</strong> popped up. Then a lifer in the form of a stonking <strong>Rufous-collared Kingfisher </strong>at about 6km from HQ. On the way back I popped into the Tabing hide again and there was a bird calling that I thought from the description in Robo might be a <strong>Red-naped Trogon</strong>. We duetted for about 20 minutes before it came right up to the hide. It was indeed a dazzling male<strong> Red-naped Trogon</strong>. What a day.</p><p></p><p>Next day was rather quiet, but I did manage a modest new bird in the form of a <strong>Puff-backed Bulbul </strong>on the trail to the Blau hide, and, rather disturbingly, a <strong>Blue-eared Kingfisher </strong>at the spot where the CHAV BB King had been. Ah.</p><p></p><p>Next day was another blinder. Just before the Bukit Tersek turnoff on the Golden mile I heard a duet betwen two birds that sounded like the <strong>Red-naped Trogon</strong> but with fewer notes on a descending scale. I made it a threesome and was very soon gawping in disbelief at a male <strong>Cinnamon-rumped Trogon,</strong> the rarest of the peninsular Malaysian trogons. I really wasn't expecting to see this bird here. As I crossed the bridge at the end of the golden mile I saw the brief arsend of Mr BB KIng zipping round the bend in the stream again. You CHAV! Another couple of km towards the Kumbang hide brought great views of a <strong>Malaysian Rail-Babbler</strong>. I crawled in after what sounded like a more drawn out call than <strong>Garnet Pitta </strong>to see this critter. It would have been rude to leave Taman Negara without one. A <strong>Maroon-breasted Philentoma </strong>(one of Frank's XI) then popped up while I'd stopped to admire a gorgeous white phase <strong>Asian Paradise Flycatcher</strong>, and checking all the <em>Malacopterons</em> finally produced a <strong>Sooty-crowned Babbler</strong>, which I was very keen to see because I was beginning to mistrust my own ability to have identified this species correctly on my previous visit here as a greener birder 12 years ago. I stopped by a large stream crossing for a sarnie and heard what sounded like Mr BB KIng getting louder to my left. Blimey. It's coming at me. I pannicked and gazed left along the river until it was so loud that it was in my left ear. Where was it!!! Then it was in my right ear. Then gradually quieter. How did it do that? I swear there are invisible CHAVs about. I gave it half an hour but it didn't return. I continued a bit, came back and gave it another hour. No joy. On the way back I finally connected with a couple of <strong>Striped Wren-Babblers</strong>. Gorgeously neat little things that the pics in Robo can't do justice to. On the way back I gave the bridge at km3 of the golden mile a last go. After 10 minutes I could hear the CHAV calling and getting louder. It was flying up the creek ! Surely there was no escape this time. And there it was ! It came belting down the creek, past my face, out over the Tahan, past the bouncers at the inner door of the vestibule, to embed itself bill-first quivering irretrievably in the depths of the kingfisher department of my list, leaving the sketchy pheasants clucking shamefuly in the foyer. YES! </p><p></p><p>Plenty of other birds of course, including 9 <strong>Garnet Pittas </strong>seen, a huge array of <strong>babblers</strong>, several <strong>Rufous-backed</strong>, and some hybrid <strong>Oriental Dwarf Kingfishers </strong>, <strong>Malaysian Eared Nightjar </strong> at the Kumbang hide etc etc (see new ones below). What an end to a loopy week in the jungle. 12 lifers if you count the pheasants, but still dipped 5 of the 1st XI, and lots more besides. Next time eh?</p><p></p><p>So you must go to TN Halftwo, it's mad. We'll have to leave OZ by Dec 8 (assuming they let us in!), but hopefully we can meet somehow.</p><p></p><p>And Chowchilla if our plans work out that way (we don't even know where we're going from Brisbane yet!)</p><p></p><p>James - We're bypassing Indo and sailing from Singapore to Oz on May 30th, so you might need a scope on a seawatch. Really hoping to visit some of Indonesia on the way home though. Best of luck on your trip.</p><p></p><p>722 Large Green Pigeon</p><p>723 Crested Fireback</p><p>724 <strong>MALAYSIAN BLUE FLYCATCHER</strong></p><p>725 Ferruginous Babbler</p><p>726 Purple-naped Sunbird</p><p>727 Finch's Bulbul</p><p>728 Straw-headed Bulbul</p><p>729 <strong>CRESTLESS FIREBACK</strong></p><p>730 Black Hornbill</p><p>731 Spotted Fantail</p><p>732 Rufous-tailed Tailorbird</p><p>733 Little Green Pigeon</p><p>734 Buf-vented Bulbul</p><p>735 Chestnut-rumped Babbler</p><p>736 Garnet Pitta</p><p>737 Rufous-crowned Babbler</p><p>738 Black-thighed Falconet</p><p>739 Buff-necked Woodpecker</p><p>XXX Southern Pied Hornbil (tax?)</p><p>740 White-chested Babbler</p><p>741 Banded Woodpecker</p><p>742 Whiskered Tree-Swift</p><p>743 Malaysian Eared Nightjar</p><p>744 Blue-rumped Parrot</p><p>745 <strong>MALAYAN PEACOCK-PHEASANT</strong></p><p>746 Rufous-chested Flycatcher</p><p>747 Grey-headed Babbler</p><p>748 White-bellied Munia</p><p>749 Short-toed Coucal</p><p>750 Large Wren-Babbler</p><p>751<strong> MOUSTACHED HAWK-CUCKOO</strong></p><p>752 Pied Triller</p><p>753 Short-tailed Babbler</p><p>754 Great Argus</p><p>755 Helmeted Hornbill</p><p>756 <strong>DIARD'S TROGON</strong></p><p>757 Yellow-eared Spiderhunter</p><p>758 Horsfield's Babbler</p><p>759 Chestnut-naped Forktail</p><p>760 Black-throated Babbler</p><p>761 Lesser Green Broadbill</p><p>762 Banded Broadbill</p><p>763 <strong>RUFOUS-COLLARED KINGFISHER</strong></p><p>764 Flufy-backed Tit-Babbler</p><p>765 White-bellied Woodpecker</p><p>766 Brown Fulvetta</p><p>767<strong> RED-NAPED TROGON</strong></p><p>768 <strong>PUFF-BACKED BULBUL</strong></p><p>769 Blue-eared Kingfisher</p><p>770 <strong>CINNAMON-RUMPED TROGON</strong></p><p>771 Malaysian Rail-Babbler</p><p>772 Crested Wood-Partridge</p><p>773 <strong>MAROON-BREASTED PHILENTOMA</strong></p><p>774 Sooty-crowned Babbler</p><p>775 <strong>STRIPED WREN-BABBLER</strong></p><p>776 <strong>BLUE-BANDED KINGFISHER</strong></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Larry Sweetland, post: 1200765, member: 27337"] [b]Taman Negara[/b] Getting to Taman Negara was easy on public transport. We stayed for a week at the budget Tahan Guest House in the village, with the exception of one night in the Kumbang hide, some 13km into the jungle. Staying on the village side of the river means you miss the first half hour or so of daylight before being able to cross the river into the park, but you can squeeze in a coffee and roti telur by the jetty. 55 species were added to the trip in 7 days of birding, including some real crackers, but the birding came in extraordinary runs of very bad and very good luck. I guess I'm never going to understand the jungle. The first day went pretty well, with a male [B]Malaysian Blue Flycatcher [/B]and a rather approachable (too approachable ?) female [B]Crestless Fireback [/B]appearing, both along what I ended up terming "the golden mile", the 3km stretch of trail along the Tahan between the camp ground and a wide stream by a wooden jetty. We ended up encountering the [B]fireback [/B]a few times and called her The Lady. I hope she's ok, cos she appears to have lost it, poor love. Now filled with optimism I figured I stood a good chance of seeing some of the 11 lifers for me that were in Frank Rheindt's 2003 trip report, if I went where he did. I called these birds "the German 1st XI". Over the next 3 days we birded around HQ area trails and headed out to the Kumbang hide and back. I don't think I've ever done so consistantly badly for such a long spell, anywhere! I defied probability by not seeing a single one of the XI. Six visits to the loop trail produced no [B]peacock-pheasant[/B]. Everything that sounded interesting couldn't be seen, including a [B]Malayan Peacock-Pheasant[/B] at the Kumbang hide and a presumed [B]Short-toed Coucal [/B]half way back to HQ. Everything that looked interesting could not be got onto, or would only appear in full view briefly when my bins were steamed up! It was a nightmare. I guess we've all been there, but come on, for three whole days! I really felt like I might as well give up birding altogether and take up an entirely different hobby. Like taping things out for example. Just kidding ;). When we had returned sweaty,beaten, and covered in leech bites, to within 2km of HQ on the golden mile, our luck finally changed. A flushed bird actually landed nearby and was mostly visible. It was a [B]Moustached Hawk-Cuckoo[/B]. Not one of the German 1st XI, but a new bird for me all the same. The curse was broken. Next day I started with visit number 7 to the loop trail and saw a [B]Malayan Peacock-Pheasant[/B]. Great start, though I must admit to thinking I better not delve too deeply into the life history of this bird or its forebears. I've a sneaky suspicion that the words "captive origin" and "reintroduction" might raise their heads. I currently feel that this bird and The Lady should perhaps reside in the S.A.D (sensed apparent dodginess) subsection of the S.A.D C.H.A.V. vestibule of my list. I then hit the golden mile, and hadn't gone 10m before a female [B]Great Argus [/B]strutted slowly across the path in front of me. Wow! The next km brought incredible views of a male [B]Diard's Trogon [/B]eating a green locust-like creature twice the size of it's head! Amazing. Before the end of the golden mile I'd also run into a male [B]Banded Pitta [/B]and a couple of immense [B]Helmeted Hornbills[/B]. A brief stop in the Tabing Hide produced brief views of a [B]Blue-banded Kingfisher [/B]zipping by. Hmmm. Perhaps not really good enough views. It would have to sit there on the C.H.A.V. (could handle another view) bench in the S.A.D C.H.A.V. list vestibule. The birds kept throwing themselves at me,[B] forktails [/B]stopped being sp, and started being stationary [B]Chestnut-naped [/B]or [B]White-crowned[/B]. Cool stuff like [B]Lesser Green, Banded, Black & Red [/B]and [B]Black & Yellow Broadbills[/B], [B]Black Magpies[/B], and [B]White-bellied Woodpecker[/B] popped up. Then a lifer in the form of a stonking [B]Rufous-collared Kingfisher [/B]at about 6km from HQ. On the way back I popped into the Tabing hide again and there was a bird calling that I thought from the description in Robo might be a [B]Red-naped Trogon[/B]. We duetted for about 20 minutes before it came right up to the hide. It was indeed a dazzling male[B] Red-naped Trogon[/B]. What a day. Next day was rather quiet, but I did manage a modest new bird in the form of a [B]Puff-backed Bulbul [/B]on the trail to the Blau hide, and, rather disturbingly, a [B]Blue-eared Kingfisher [/B]at the spot where the CHAV BB King had been. Ah. Next day was another blinder. Just before the Bukit Tersek turnoff on the Golden mile I heard a duet betwen two birds that sounded like the [B]Red-naped Trogon[/B] but with fewer notes on a descending scale. I made it a threesome and was very soon gawping in disbelief at a male [B]Cinnamon-rumped Trogon,[/B] the rarest of the peninsular Malaysian trogons. I really wasn't expecting to see this bird here. As I crossed the bridge at the end of the golden mile I saw the brief arsend of Mr BB KIng zipping round the bend in the stream again. You CHAV! Another couple of km towards the Kumbang hide brought great views of a [B]Malaysian Rail-Babbler[/B]. I crawled in after what sounded like a more drawn out call than [B]Garnet Pitta [/B]to see this critter. It would have been rude to leave Taman Negara without one. A [B]Maroon-breasted Philentoma [/B](one of Frank's XI) then popped up while I'd stopped to admire a gorgeous white phase [B]Asian Paradise Flycatcher[/B], and checking all the [I]Malacopterons[/I] finally produced a [B]Sooty-crowned Babbler[/B], which I was very keen to see because I was beginning to mistrust my own ability to have identified this species correctly on my previous visit here as a greener birder 12 years ago. I stopped by a large stream crossing for a sarnie and heard what sounded like Mr BB KIng getting louder to my left. Blimey. It's coming at me. I pannicked and gazed left along the river until it was so loud that it was in my left ear. Where was it!!! Then it was in my right ear. Then gradually quieter. How did it do that? I swear there are invisible CHAVs about. I gave it half an hour but it didn't return. I continued a bit, came back and gave it another hour. No joy. On the way back I finally connected with a couple of [B]Striped Wren-Babblers[/B]. Gorgeously neat little things that the pics in Robo can't do justice to. On the way back I gave the bridge at km3 of the golden mile a last go. After 10 minutes I could hear the CHAV calling and getting louder. It was flying up the creek ! Surely there was no escape this time. And there it was ! It came belting down the creek, past my face, out over the Tahan, past the bouncers at the inner door of the vestibule, to embed itself bill-first quivering irretrievably in the depths of the kingfisher department of my list, leaving the sketchy pheasants clucking shamefuly in the foyer. YES! Plenty of other birds of course, including 9 [B]Garnet Pittas [/B]seen, a huge array of [B]babblers[/B], several [B]Rufous-backed[/B], and some hybrid [B]Oriental Dwarf Kingfishers [/B], [B]Malaysian Eared Nightjar [/B] at the Kumbang hide etc etc (see new ones below). What an end to a loopy week in the jungle. 12 lifers if you count the pheasants, but still dipped 5 of the 1st XI, and lots more besides. Next time eh? So you must go to TN Halftwo, it's mad. We'll have to leave OZ by Dec 8 (assuming they let us in!), but hopefully we can meet somehow. And Chowchilla if our plans work out that way (we don't even know where we're going from Brisbane yet!) James - We're bypassing Indo and sailing from Singapore to Oz on May 30th, so you might need a scope on a seawatch. Really hoping to visit some of Indonesia on the way home though. Best of luck on your trip. 722 Large Green Pigeon 723 Crested Fireback 724 [B]MALAYSIAN BLUE FLYCATCHER[/B] 725 Ferruginous Babbler 726 Purple-naped Sunbird 727 Finch's Bulbul 728 Straw-headed Bulbul 729 [B]CRESTLESS FIREBACK[/B] 730 Black Hornbill 731 Spotted Fantail 732 Rufous-tailed Tailorbird 733 Little Green Pigeon 734 Buf-vented Bulbul 735 Chestnut-rumped Babbler 736 Garnet Pitta 737 Rufous-crowned Babbler 738 Black-thighed Falconet 739 Buff-necked Woodpecker XXX Southern Pied Hornbil (tax?) 740 White-chested Babbler 741 Banded Woodpecker 742 Whiskered Tree-Swift 743 Malaysian Eared Nightjar 744 Blue-rumped Parrot 745 [B]MALAYAN PEACOCK-PHEASANT[/B] 746 Rufous-chested Flycatcher 747 Grey-headed Babbler 748 White-bellied Munia 749 Short-toed Coucal 750 Large Wren-Babbler 751[B] MOUSTACHED HAWK-CUCKOO[/B] 752 Pied Triller 753 Short-tailed Babbler 754 Great Argus 755 Helmeted Hornbill 756 [B]DIARD'S TROGON[/B] 757 Yellow-eared Spiderhunter 758 Horsfield's Babbler 759 Chestnut-naped Forktail 760 Black-throated Babbler 761 Lesser Green Broadbill 762 Banded Broadbill 763 [B]RUFOUS-COLLARED KINGFISHER[/B] 764 Flufy-backed Tit-Babbler 765 White-bellied Woodpecker 766 Brown Fulvetta 767[B] RED-NAPED TROGON[/B] 768 [B]PUFF-BACKED BULBUL[/B] 769 Blue-eared Kingfisher 770 [B]CINNAMON-RUMPED TROGON[/B] 771 Malaysian Rail-Babbler 772 Crested Wood-Partridge 773 [B]MAROON-BREASTED PHILENTOMA[/B] 774 Sooty-crowned Babbler 775 [B]STRIPED WREN-BABBLER[/B] 776 [B]BLUE-BANDED KINGFISHER[/B] [/QUOTE]
Insert quotes...
Verification
Post reply
Forums
Birding
Vacational Trip Reports
Bristol to Kagu ?
This site uses cookies to help personalise content, tailor your experience and to keep you logged in if you register.
By continuing to use this site, you are consenting to our use of cookies.
Accept
Learn more...
Top