Showing posts with label Geckos. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Geckos. Show all posts

Friday, 11 January 2019

The Piedras River and Casa Kankui in El Zaino, Colombia

It was a long drive from El Dorado to El Zaino (about 5 minutes drive from Tayrona National Park) and walking into the hostel didn't really fit what I had expected. I knew it was along the highway but I expected the property to be a bit set back but this is ON the highway. The pool view is the highway and the highways views the pool.
Kankui Hostal
BUT all of that first impression drastically improved after settling in and over the course of the stay. The breakfast is included and is fantastic with fresh fruit, juice, scrambled eggs and arepas. Our room was river view and really was ON the river with only about 1 m of sand in between. There was air conditioning and TV. We had our own private balcony area with a hammock and chairs.
Piedras River at Kankui Hostal
Piedras River at Kankui Hostal
The river was lovely, crystal clear and cool (but not very deep in dry season) with a rock/sand bottom that was easy to walk in. Stretching my legs after the long drive I walked just a short distance into the river and was surrounded by birds! Hummingbirds, tanagers warblers!! All flitting around these large mimosa shrubs blooming on a sand flat in the river.
Streaked Flycatcher
Blue-gray Tanagers
I walked the river many times in the three days we spent there and I saw many birds including:
Ruddy Ground-dove
Spotted Sandpiper
Crested Caracara
Yellow-headed Caracara
Yellow-headed Caracara
Pale-bellied Hermit
Steely-vented Hummingbird
Rufous-tailed Hummingbird
Rufous-tailed Hummingbird
Snowy Egret
Black Vulture
Turkey Vulture
Ringed Kingfisher
Amazon Kingfisher
Green Kingfisher
Green Kingfisher Male
Green Kingfisher Male
Green Kingfisher Female
Green Kingfisher Female
Red-crowned Woodpecker
Red-crowned Woodpecker
Orange-chinned Parakeet
Blue-headed Parrot
Blue-headed Parrot
Yellow-bellied Elaenia
Yellow-bellied Elaenia
Social Flycatcher
Summer Tanager
Summer Tanager
Tropical Kingbird 
Tropical Kingbird
Southern Rough-winged Swallow
Southern Rough-winged Swallow
Bicoloured Wren
House Wren
Long-billed Gnatwren
Pale-breasted Thrush
Baltimore Oriole
Orange-crowned Oriole
Orange-crowned Oriole
Long-tailed Grackle
Blue-gray Tanager
Crimson-backed Tanager
Crimson-backed Tanager
Palm Tanager
Palm Tanager
Bananaquit
Northern Waterthrush
Yellow Warbler
Prothonotary Warbler
Grayish Saltator
Gray Seedeater

At night the river was loud with Giant Toads and fishing spiders but surprisingly little else. I did surprise an armadillo one night and it very slowly sauntered off in front of me like an old grump.
Giant Toad (Rhinella horribilis)
The highway doesn't have much around it here and the best places to eat are literally across the street at Chayrama or Yuluka EcoHostal. The food and drinks at both are lovely but I am partial to the ecohostal because of the wildlife. The restaurant is set higher up so you have a nice view of the trees and can bird watch while you eat or if you go for a quick walk around you see frogs, skinks and geckos on the property.
Yuluka EcoHostal
Yuluka EcoHostal
Blue-gray Tanager
Cimson-backed Tanager

Saturday, 5 January 2019

Arriving in Minca, Colombia

We arrived in the Santa Marta airport and were met by a taxi driver arranged through the Hotel Minca. This took us along the highways and to the winding roads up to the small mountain town. Along the road there was natural cactus scrubland with many vultures circling in the sky above.  It was a scene straight out of an old west movie.

The scenery drastically changed as we went up the winding roads of the Santa Marta Mountains. The city shrunk into the distance but you could still see it over the steep drop over the side of the road. The trees were tall and old and the houses we passed were literally hanging right off the the side of the mountain.
Hotel Minca
When we arrived at Hotel Minca it was the prefect time for some late afternoon birding. We didn't even have to go anywhere though. The hotel itself was a hotspot for birds. We saw over 20 species very quickly and a fair number of them were ones I had never seen before.

Hotel Minca
The gardens around the hotel were lush and birds were abundant in the trees and gardens. A few were even going for a quick dip in the pool. The hummingbird feeders were bustling. The most common were White-vented Plumeleteers, Steely-vented Hummingbird and Rufous-tailed Hummingbird but there was also the odd Brown Violetear and White-necked Jacobin.
Hotel Minca
The total list of what we saw:
White-tipped Dove
Eared Dove
Squirrel Cuckoo
Squirrel Cuckoo

White-necked Jacobin
White-vented Plumeleteer
White-vented Plumeleteer

White-vented Plumeleteer

Steely-vented Hummingbird
Steely-vented Hummingbird

Steely-vented Hummingbird

Rufous-tailed Hummingbird
Rufous-tailed Hummingbird
Black Vulture
Red-crowned Woodpecker
Orange-chinned Parakeets
Orange-chinned Parakeet
Yellow-bellied Elaenia
Yellow-bellied Elaenia
Yellow-bellied Elaenia
Great Kiskadee
Boat-billed Flycatcher
Social Flycatcher
Social Flycatcher

Tropical Kingbird
Bicolored Wren
Bicolored Wren

Bicolored Wren

Pale-breasted Thrush
Grayish Saltator
Grayish Saltator
Grayish Saltator

After a few hours of relaxing we walked around the town but the birding hardly compared to the area around the hotel. Despite the small size Minca is quite busy with people. There are motor taxis everywhere and even the small dirt roads on the outskirts are full of people coming back from swimming in the waterfall or river.
Iglesia Minka
By night you can see the light reflect off the eyes of spiders and noctural mammals. I saw a large rabbit that looked more like an escaped pet and a long skittish mammal that reminded me of a large ferret. There were lots of the typical house geckos running along the walls of the hotel (much less insect diversity than I would have expected and only a few moths were around the lights) and I did manage to find one large gecko and an anole in the shrubs around the hotel.

Turnip-tailed Gecko (Thecadactylus rapicauda)

Turnip-tailed Gecko (Thecadactylus rapicauda)
Turnip-tailed Gecko (Thecadactylus rapicauda)
Neotropical Green Anole (Anolis biporcatus)