Introduction
This trip - originally planned for 2008 - was finally organised and set in motion last year and undertaken by myself and two good mates, Mark and Dave, combining a number of the usual Eastern Turkey birding sites with a side adventure into Georgia on public transport. This proved to be a very successful and very economical way to attempt the Greater Caucasus endemics without too much critical additional travelling as most of the distance was covered by an enjoyable overnight sleeper train from the Black Sea to the capital Tbilisi.
Back in Eastern Turkey after our first day in the Pontic Mountains we visited sites along the Georgian, Armenian, and Iranian borders before heading to the famous birding spots along Van Golu and the River Euphrates near Syria. The final leg of the trip was into the eastern Mediterranean, first heading north to the Aladag Mountains, and then onto the coastal wetlands of the Goksu and Tarsus Deltas. We had also intended to cross over to Turkish Cyprus to see Cyprus Warbler and Cyprus Pied Wheatear, but weekend ferry timetables meant little practical time birding Cyprus compared to cost, so we stuck to Turkey. If we had hit the mid week ferry schedule, we would have gone across.
The most memorable birding sites were the high mountains of the Pontics and Greater Caucasus, and the far eastern high altitude grasslands and mountains of Kurdish Eastern Turkey. Turkey is a beautiful country with stunning scenery and from our personal experience, friendly people. Below are details on this very enjoyable trip.
Itinerary
The itinerary is provided in the table below.
Costs (Exchange Rates at time: £1 = c2.5Turkish Lira = 3 Georgian Lari)
Flights from Heathrow were £300 pp for arrive in Trabzon and depart from Adana, the split destinations increasing the cost by about £100. Turkish Airlines.
Hire Car from Hire Car 3000. Expensive at £530 + £70 one way drop off Trabzon to Adana, Renault Clio saloon. We experienced problems prior to leaving with this company, but all were eventually resolved. Watch them like hawks!
Overnight Train from Batumi to Tbilisi 23Lari pp for standard class, four beds per cabin. For first class the costs are not that much more, but only two beds per cabin so with three of us we would either have to have purchased two first class cabins or nominate one of us to share with a stranger.
Taxi From Tbilisi to Kazbegi 100Lari for car (probably quite expensive). From the taxi rank outside the train station. Be aware of trick to change agreed fare (eg driver saying we agreed 100Euros not 100Lari… etc)
Mini Bus (Marshrutka) from Kazbegi to Tbilisi (bus station) <£10 pp. If on a tight budget would recommend the mini bus option both ways along the Georgian Military Highway. They run three a day minimum by the looks of it whilst we were there. The bus station in Tbilisi is a two minute taxi ride from the train station.
Hotels In Eastern Turkey & Georgia cheap less than £10 pp per night. More expensive from Bericik westwards. We quite often found triple bedded rooms for the three of us keeping costs down.
Cyprus Ferry c80Euros pp return (without vehicle)
Gen
All the various Gosney Birding Guides to Eastern Turkey and Med Turkey were purchased and although now getting old they are definately recommended as still very useful for providing detailed hand drawn and written directions to many birding sites in the covered areas, more than we had time to visit.
Some of these have been updated on the Birdguides website.
https://www.birdguides.com/estore/c-3-books.aspx?&pagenum=2
Eastern Turkey Updates:
http://www.birdguides.com/products/findingbirdsin/BKET.asp
Central Turkey Updates:
http://www.birdguides.com/products/findingbirdsin/BKCT.asp
A great many trip reports were researched from Travelling Birder through to google searches, too many to list here. The following were very detailed and interesting reads:
Hendricks, KP (2004) http://home.planet.nl/~hend0845/Turkey2004/general.html
Olsen, SN (2007) http://www.birdtours.co.uk/tripreports/turkey/Turkey-34/se-turkey-07.htm
Merrill, I (2001) http://www.osme.org/osmetrip/turk16.html
For Georgia the trip report from Chris Batty was very useful, Chris kindly emailing the Mount Kazbek map from his trip report through to us, and he recommended the R. Bonser trip report which we also found useful:
http://www.fyldebirdclub.org/abroad.htm#AG
http://www.freewebs.com/richbonser/georgiamay2008.htm
The Birds of Turkey by Kirwan et al Helm 2008, with its glorious atmospheric cover art by John Gale, is a very detailed and interesting account of the countries avifauna, with each species being given an overview in terms of latest taxonomy, status & distribution (inc. maps) and breeding information.
http://www.acblack.com/naturalhisto...?isbn=9781408104750&title=The+Birds+of+Turkey
Misc
A Mepmedya Yayinlari 1:400,000 Road Atlas was used in Turkey. It was expensive and necessary but not altogether accurate, and not just a result of the many new motorway roads in the process of being built. http://www.stanfords.co.uk/stock/turkey-road-atlas-181941/
In the following daily account a list of target species and then others is provided. This is a personal target list and even in the others section many good birds may have been left unnamed as it is mostly written from my memory.
Pre trip planning
The map shown below, with info on the individual markers, is available on Google Maps at the following link:
http://maps.google.co.uk/maps/ms?hl...159169962429325.00047f8e21bf7cd018ee7&t=h&z=5
All subsequent maps to be provided below are based on Google mapping resource. nb none of the distance covered maps below are at the same scale, for distances covered see Itinerary.
This trip - originally planned for 2008 - was finally organised and set in motion last year and undertaken by myself and two good mates, Mark and Dave, combining a number of the usual Eastern Turkey birding sites with a side adventure into Georgia on public transport. This proved to be a very successful and very economical way to attempt the Greater Caucasus endemics without too much critical additional travelling as most of the distance was covered by an enjoyable overnight sleeper train from the Black Sea to the capital Tbilisi.
Back in Eastern Turkey after our first day in the Pontic Mountains we visited sites along the Georgian, Armenian, and Iranian borders before heading to the famous birding spots along Van Golu and the River Euphrates near Syria. The final leg of the trip was into the eastern Mediterranean, first heading north to the Aladag Mountains, and then onto the coastal wetlands of the Goksu and Tarsus Deltas. We had also intended to cross over to Turkish Cyprus to see Cyprus Warbler and Cyprus Pied Wheatear, but weekend ferry timetables meant little practical time birding Cyprus compared to cost, so we stuck to Turkey. If we had hit the mid week ferry schedule, we would have gone across.
The most memorable birding sites were the high mountains of the Pontics and Greater Caucasus, and the far eastern high altitude grasslands and mountains of Kurdish Eastern Turkey. Turkey is a beautiful country with stunning scenery and from our personal experience, friendly people. Below are details on this very enjoyable trip.
Itinerary
The itinerary is provided in the table below.
Costs (Exchange Rates at time: £1 = c2.5Turkish Lira = 3 Georgian Lari)
Flights from Heathrow were £300 pp for arrive in Trabzon and depart from Adana, the split destinations increasing the cost by about £100. Turkish Airlines.
Hire Car from Hire Car 3000. Expensive at £530 + £70 one way drop off Trabzon to Adana, Renault Clio saloon. We experienced problems prior to leaving with this company, but all were eventually resolved. Watch them like hawks!
Overnight Train from Batumi to Tbilisi 23Lari pp for standard class, four beds per cabin. For first class the costs are not that much more, but only two beds per cabin so with three of us we would either have to have purchased two first class cabins or nominate one of us to share with a stranger.
Taxi From Tbilisi to Kazbegi 100Lari for car (probably quite expensive). From the taxi rank outside the train station. Be aware of trick to change agreed fare (eg driver saying we agreed 100Euros not 100Lari… etc)
Mini Bus (Marshrutka) from Kazbegi to Tbilisi (bus station) <£10 pp. If on a tight budget would recommend the mini bus option both ways along the Georgian Military Highway. They run three a day minimum by the looks of it whilst we were there. The bus station in Tbilisi is a two minute taxi ride from the train station.
Hotels In Eastern Turkey & Georgia cheap less than £10 pp per night. More expensive from Bericik westwards. We quite often found triple bedded rooms for the three of us keeping costs down.
Cyprus Ferry c80Euros pp return (without vehicle)
Gen
All the various Gosney Birding Guides to Eastern Turkey and Med Turkey were purchased and although now getting old they are definately recommended as still very useful for providing detailed hand drawn and written directions to many birding sites in the covered areas, more than we had time to visit.
Some of these have been updated on the Birdguides website.
https://www.birdguides.com/estore/c-3-books.aspx?&pagenum=2
Eastern Turkey Updates:
http://www.birdguides.com/products/findingbirdsin/BKET.asp
Central Turkey Updates:
http://www.birdguides.com/products/findingbirdsin/BKCT.asp
A great many trip reports were researched from Travelling Birder through to google searches, too many to list here. The following were very detailed and interesting reads:
Hendricks, KP (2004) http://home.planet.nl/~hend0845/Turkey2004/general.html
Olsen, SN (2007) http://www.birdtours.co.uk/tripreports/turkey/Turkey-34/se-turkey-07.htm
Merrill, I (2001) http://www.osme.org/osmetrip/turk16.html
For Georgia the trip report from Chris Batty was very useful, Chris kindly emailing the Mount Kazbek map from his trip report through to us, and he recommended the R. Bonser trip report which we also found useful:
http://www.fyldebirdclub.org/abroad.htm#AG
http://www.freewebs.com/richbonser/georgiamay2008.htm
The Birds of Turkey by Kirwan et al Helm 2008, with its glorious atmospheric cover art by John Gale, is a very detailed and interesting account of the countries avifauna, with each species being given an overview in terms of latest taxonomy, status & distribution (inc. maps) and breeding information.
http://www.acblack.com/naturalhisto...?isbn=9781408104750&title=The+Birds+of+Turkey
Misc
A Mepmedya Yayinlari 1:400,000 Road Atlas was used in Turkey. It was expensive and necessary but not altogether accurate, and not just a result of the many new motorway roads in the process of being built. http://www.stanfords.co.uk/stock/turkey-road-atlas-181941/
In the following daily account a list of target species and then others is provided. This is a personal target list and even in the others section many good birds may have been left unnamed as it is mostly written from my memory.
Pre trip planning
The map shown below, with info on the individual markers, is available on Google Maps at the following link:
http://maps.google.co.uk/maps/ms?hl...159169962429325.00047f8e21bf7cd018ee7&t=h&z=5
All subsequent maps to be provided below are based on Google mapping resource. nb none of the distance covered maps below are at the same scale, for distances covered see Itinerary.