What was envisioned as cheap "club-type"
tour limited to middle PNG actually turned into a target-specific, serious-lister,
"all-PNG", type tour as no club members came and the four Brits who did
were very independent, often splitting off, wanting to do it without help.
"We don't usually hire guides," they would say, so I quickly learnt that
I was really only the tour organiser who happened to come along and keep
them out of possible danger. They had researched their tour very well,
typical of that 60-70-odd percent of Northern European birders who tour
independently. As they wanted to identify the species themselves (which
is what I try and get everyone to do anyway) and knew the birds so well
in theory, my job was mainly taking them to the places where the birds
were and only having to help out with a few species.
This "full-PNG" tour was only suggested
about two months before take-off so it was put together fairly quickly.
But to complicate matters Sam Kepuknai at Kiunga, being a key player in
most full-PNG tours these days, was lost in the bush and when he finally
responded to our preferred dates they had to be changed. So the entire
tour had to be re-organised, including all the internal flights, at about
3 weeks notice.
So this particular tour really started
in Kiunga, without the benefit of the usual introduction to
PNG birds via Varirata National Park
near Moresby. We went Cairns-Port
Moresby-Kiunga-Ekame Lodge-Kiunga-Tabubil- Hagen-Kumul Lodge-Lae-Madang-Keki
Lodge-Lae-Tari-Warili Lodge-Port Moresby-Varirata NP-Cairns.
The tour party of Chris Lodge,
and Graeme & Moira Wallace was devoted to seeing and photographing
as many Birds of Paradise and Bowerbirds as possible and as the
consequence of photography taking much extra time several other species
remained unseen.
However with a total of 246-260 species
of birds still seen by different tour members in the 3 weeks, we were quite
content as 21 of the 23 target Bird of Paradise species were
seen (Black Sicklebill heard only and Emperor Bird of Paradise missed altogether)
19 of them males, 11 of which were photographed, some extensively. Male
Flame
Bowerbird was also photographed well, a species sometimes quite hard
to even see in flight, let alone see perched close enough to photograph.
In the following report most common
species found in Australia are omitted.
June 15th
Afternoon flight from Cairns
to Moresby, hired vehicle, drove to Bluff
Inn 17k out of Moresby toward Varirata NP, drove to entrance
of Varirata NP. Good birds in the late
afternoon were - Yellow-streaked and Black-capped Lories, Red-cheeked
Parrot, Glossy and Uniform Swiftlets, Hooded Butcherbird, Pacific Swallow,
and 20+Yellow-faced Mynas feeding in one roadside tree.
16th
To Kiunga
(unusual
pre-dawn Barn Owl at 14 Mile outside Port
Moresby on the way to the early morning flight). Met by Sam
Kepuknai and driver Charles and driven to the 17
km site n. of Kiunga for the Greater Bird of Paradise
lek. After lunch we went back to Gre Rd.
New trip species there were - Long-tailed Buzzard, Papuan Hornbill (Kokomo),
Orange-bellied Dove, Collared Fruit Pigeon, Red-flanked Lorikeet, Eclectus
Parrot, Papuan Needletail, Mimic Honeyeater (Meliphaga), Brown Oriole,
Greater Bird of Paradise, Black Sunbird.
17th
Boated up the Fly
River and Elavela tributary,
2.5 hrs plus stops, to Sam's isolated Ekame Lodge,
built of bush materials in the lowland rainforest and overlooking the river.
On the way up the river, around the lodge, and on the bushwalk in the afternoon,
we saw - Pacific Baza, Variable Goshawk (was Grey), Black-billed
or Bar-tailed Dove; Pink-spotted, Ornate, Orange-fronted, Superb, Orange-bellied,
and Beautiful Fruit Doves, mostly on one fruiting tree; Pinon, Collared,
and Zoe Fruit Pigeons, and a flock of Papuan Mountain Pigeons flying
high over. Our first Palm Cockatoo sailed over low enough for the
beak size to impress us, as did the perched Channel-billed Cuckoos.
Less than an hour into the voyage,
we were forced to land to photograph a displaying 12-Wire Bird of Paradise
on the opposite bank; three scopes were in continuous demand for nearly
30 mins to record this exoticism as a female came and went and the male
backed down the pole to meet her to try to brush her face with his tail
wires. Moustached Treeswift, Golden Monarch, Golden Triller (Cuckooshrike),
Glossy-mantled Manucode (another Bird of Paradise), and Grey Crow
were other choice birds seen for the first time on the tour.
After lunch at Ekame
Lodge we boated upstream another 20 mins to a mixed habitat
of riverside flood forest (similar to the varzea of the Neotropics) and
the more open and larger-treed terraces alongside (similar to the
terra firme of the Neotropics).
Shortly after landing, a pair of Rufous-bellied
Kookaburras stopped us in our tracks and then a pair of Southern
Crowned Pigeons, the largest pigeon species still extant, was flushed;
after about 20 mins scouting Sam led us to a scoped but cluttered view
of one of them perched. You make a big thing of your first view of an "Oh-My-God"
bird but we didn't know we were to flush another 23 in the next two days,
many with much better views!
Even so, the main target here was
King
Bird of Paradise, tiny but resplendent in his red-red over white-white
uniform, possibly the prettiest bird in the world. Again three telescopes
were on his display site under the canopy, this time for over an hour,
as he called and preened and waited for a loved one to come - any loved
one would do (I know a few birders like that). It was claimed as an "Oh-My-God"
bird and stayed best bird of the tour for Chris. While there we tried
hard to call in the almost-as-beautiful Common Paradise Kingfisher and
failed but other new birds that day were Yellow-bellied Longbill,
and Golden Myna back at the camp. Several Hornbills whooshing about
and numerous herons and egrets on the river made it a most memorable day.
18th
Ekame Lodge
is on a high bank and almost free of mosquitos, nevertheless we slept under
nets and could have a coil burning nearby if we wanted. First bird was
pre-dawn, a Papuan Frogmouth, (Marbled heard only), in the torch
light. I swear Sam tries to call them in while he's sleeping, he's so into
birds.
From the eating porch we always watched
the tree tops on the other side of the river managing to scope Large
and Orange-breasted Fig Parrots, and Lowland Peltops. Someone
saw a Black Bittern from the boat today and a Grey-headed Goshawk,
small, and white under, planed over the river, the only one seen on the
tour. Common Koel was seen clearly for a change, our only sighting
of a Common Paradise Kingfisher as it shot over the boat, and Crinkle-collared
and Trumpet Manucodes.
Back in the forest only Long-billed
Honeyeater, Black-sided Robin, Rufous Babbler, White-belied Pitohui,
and Dwarf Longbill (was a Honeyeater, now in the Longbill-Berrypecker
Family), made a relatively slow morning of it. Suddenly Sam found a Hook-billed
Kingfisher, perched quietly. It was photographed and videoed for 30
mins and hardly moved. Great stuff. In the afternoon we walked to the pigeon
drinking place - only Wompoo was new. But that's birding. So we
walked back home through some pretty good habitat, very interesting in
itself. Suddenly the much desired Blue Jewel (Babbler) called out.
Sam whistled it in part way and we all saw it lurking about 20 m away in
a tiny clearing, but with reasonable views. Not a bad day after all.
That evening a short hunt for the
still elusive Marbled Frogmouth produced instead a small Brown Glider,
a marsupial and our first mammal, hunting up the small trees to eye level
then down again. Sam had never seen one before despite having lived in
the area for 35 years.
19th
We had a very slow morning today.
Sam proudly showed us his new circular track, cut with much effort through
very promising, partly open "terra firme" habitat but Green-backed Warbler,
a Gerygone also found around Darwin and Hooded Monarch were the
only birds of note.
From the cabin at lunch we saw Boyer's
Cuckooshrike and after began the slow drift downstream to Kiunga, Great-billed
Heron being the highlight as it flew in front, landed, flew in front,
and landed again. Excellent views of a common but hard to see species of
northern Australasia and southern SE Asia.
20th
From the Kiunga
Guest House on our usual dawn start we went several kms along
the Boystown Road and stood for 3 hours, 0700 to 1000, on a small
knoll beside the road. If you've never been here before skepticism must
prevail about this being the best site in the world to see Flame Bowerbird
from. Yellow-capped Pygmy Parrot landed and Meyer's Friarbirds
were there. So was Papuan Flowerpecker. And other good birds already
seen but was this the day of the big dip?
Suddenly two birds, brown over and
very yellow under flew into a handy tree and began to preen. Female Flame
Bowerbirds, pretty nice too. They hung around for half an hour then
departed. Time dragged on again. 0945hrs and time to leave. Just as suddenly,
another bird like a large, orange bumblebee flew in to the same tree; flame-orange
over, bright yellow under. "Oh-My-God" (from the group again). Male
Flame Bowerbird. It hung round for 10 minutes. A bomb could have gone
off behind us and no-one would have noticed.
So it was the right place. And maybe
no other group has ever had the luck to see both male and female perched
within 70m. of them. What a day. Birding the road part way back some of
us saw Brown Falcon and Emperor Fairy Wren, and after lunch
at Kiunga Guest House we birded the airport, looking for Streak-headed
(now includes Spotted) Munia. No show. Instead we saw White-bellied
Eagle, and Pheasant Coucal. So we headed for Gre
Rd again. Very quiet except for, or because of, a Brown Goshawk.
21st
Drove to the Greater Bird of Paradise
lek again this morning. The trees above us seemed full of them with a couple
of Raggiana Bird of Paradise, one probably a crossbred, among the
displaying males. This is where Attenborough was pulled into an adjacent
treee to see them at eye-level. We scoped from the ground and were almost
as estatic.
As we wandered out of the forest Rusty
Mouse Warbler, Tawny-breasted and Puff-backed Honeyeaters (Meliphaga),
Frilled Monarch, (we were finally stopping for ordinary birds), and
Grey-headed
Cuckooshrike were added to the trip list.
After lunch Charles drove us the 140km
to Tabubil. Excellent habitat and good
scenery from the ridge-top road. Small villages and schools here and there.
In Tabubil,Scrub
Honeyeater (Meliphaga) and Lemon-bellied Flycatcher hit the
list as we set up our hide for Magnificent Bird of Paradise watching the
next day.
22nd.
And it worked. The male came in to
be seen briefly but not clearly to his on-the-ground display site. Some
gardening was called for to open the viewing aperture a fraction so the
male could be seen climbiing his display stick, and photographed, from
30 metres. Next morning just after daylight at 0630 the three photographers
settled in the hide and all had good but brief views and some footage of
the Magnificent Bird of Paradise doing his display. Thanks Sam
and Charles, brilliant work.
We drove right up the nearby Dablin
Creek road next, the landowner telling us the gate was now always
open; good news as it is very steep. On the third short flat bit we stopped
and almost immediately got onto a party of feeding Carola's Parotias,
a male among them, flitting from treetop to treetop a hundred metres away.
Some of the females stayed long enough for brief scoped views but, too
quickly, they were all gone. Parotias display on the ground too, and are
even more secretive than Magnificent Bird of Paradise, but one day - -
.
A group of Pygmy Lorikeets
zoomed past, high overhead (I've seldom seen these birds perched), then
Blue-collared
Parrots doing the same and distinguished by their musical calls. A
new addition (for me) to the avifauna of Dablin Ck was
White-winged
Wren, and we saw Mountain Honeyeater (Meliphaga), glimpsed the
Chestnut-backed
Jewel (Babbler) as it flew past in response to a tape. Female Scater's
Whistler (a bit lower in the winter), Variable Pitohui, Black Monarch,
Rufous-backed Fantail, Black Fantail (the last three within 200 vertical
metres of each other),
Stout-billed Cuckooshrike, Mountain Peltops,
and Western Papuan White-eye, were all new trip birds seen up Dablin
Creek.
As the birds "went off" before lunch
we drove a few kms toward the OK Tedi Mine
to see those charming members of the Australasian Robin Family, the Torrent
Flycatchers. Very nice. In the mid-afternoon we tried to do it all
again but Dablin Ck was as dead as a Dodo.
23rd
And nearly as dead the next morning
except for Northern Fantail. But we had to leave Dablin Ck at 0830,
an hour before we had arrived the previous morning, so we could catch a
plane. So on to Mt Hagen and Kumul
Lodge. The flight, as is the norm on smaller planes in PNG,
was low enough to see lots and lots of almost untouched forest, the largest
contiguous tropical rainforest left outside the Neotropics. Awesome.
At Mt Hagen we were met as usual by
our friend Kim Arut, her husband, Kumul
Lodge manager Paul, arriving later.
Key staff member Second John offered
to show us "a bird of paradise" on the way to the lodge which is 40 mins
out of town, on the Tomba Pass below
the real Mt Hagen, at 2850m a.s.l.,
the highest lodge in PNG, the same height as the Tari Gap with the same
birds.
But first around Hagen
town we sought out the Brown-breasted Warbler, Ornate Honeyeater
(Melidectes), (the Mountain [Red-headed] Myzomela was
guide-seen only), and the Black-headed Whistler.
The Bird of Paradise on the way to
the lodge was the Superb and we only heard it's harsh call before flushing
it; but sudenly a Yellow-breasted Bowerbird arrived to perch in
a small tree nearby. Not often reported by tour groups but common enough
here in the Waghi and adjacent Valleys.
Kumul Lodge is such an excellent
place to visit, friendly, comfortable, warm at night, beer always available
to celebrate great sightings, and excellent food prepared by the always
happy and helpful assistant manager and head cook, Josephine.
Always a pleasure to stay at Kumul Lodge, more tours should.
In the short afternoon left to us
we identified Papuan Lorikeet (thought by some to be the most beautiful
parrot in the world), Mountain Swiftlet, Mountain Mouse Warbler, Papuan
Scrub Warbler (Wren), Grey-streaked Honeyeater, Belford's Honeyeater (Melidectes),
Canary Flycatcher (another Australasian Robin), White-winged Robin,
Friendly Fantail, and Mountain Firetail.
To top it off, a female Brown Sicklebill
was seen feeding beside the lodge and the gorgeous (best bird of the trip
for Moira after we watched a male for some time in the late afternoon sun)
Ribbon-tailed
Astrapia reasonably common in the old moss-covered trees around about.
24th
Emerald (Orange-billed) Lorikeets
are at Kumul Lodge and we almost always see a Brehms Tiger Parrot
feeding above the top car-park, usually the male identified by the yellow
slash across the side of the neck. This was the only species of Tiger Parot
seen on the entire tour - above Ambua Lodge we saw many, all Brehm's, Brehm's,
Brehm's, right up to the Tari Gap. I've never seen so many tiger parrots
on one trip and all were Brehms.
Rufous-backed and Smoky Honeyeaters,
Slaty (Blue-grey) Robin, male Sclater's and Regent Whistlers, Tit
Berrypecker, and Island Thrush, all present and correct around
Kumul Lodge, but always one of my favourites was the male Crested Bird
of Paradise, orange over and black under, this time glimpsed only,
unfortunately. Once, a few years ago, a male landed on a unit's verandah
at daylight before the couple, who had slept with the French doors open
to admire the magnificent view of Mt Hagen, were out of bed; exotic birding
at it's best!
A female Stephanie's Astrapia
was seen today westward over the pass and down about 300m, oddly enough
the only bird of this species seen in spite of spending another 4 days
around Ambua Lodge where they are more common. And a few female plumaged
King
of Saxony BoPs scoped further down.
25th
On our morning bush-walk, the White-breasted
(Fruit)
Dove
was very well seen, plus Mid-mountain (Grey) Warbler (there
is a Grey Warbler in New Zealand in the same Australasian Warbler Family),
Blue-capped
Ifrita (seen well again at the Tari Gap), the much-sought-after
Wattled
Ploughbill, Rufous-naped Whistler, and
Crested Berrypecker one
of the two (Tit Berrypecker being the other) in the Painted Berrypecker
Family.
In the afternoon Long-tailed Shrike
in the grasslands across the road, and Great Woodswallow perched
outside the dining room at lunchtime, were added to our trip list.
This morning a female Archbold's
Bowerbird was guide-seen only at the same feeding tree the Stephanie's
was at yesterday and while that was going on one of the others claimed
a Snow Mountain Robin, hard to believe for some as it was so far
below and to the east of it's range, but Joseph Tano, Ambua's head
bird guide, still insists he saw a Snow Mountain Robin at the base of the
Big
Waterfall at about 2100m, many years ago.
A pair of Chestnut Forest Rail, which
live around the comlex of Kumul Lodge, were taped in but kept right on
going and never were seen at all. And Feline Owlet-nightjars were heard
on two nights calling from on top of our units but never seen. Oh dear.
BUT, from the dining room we all saw a pair of Mountain Nightjars
hunting from the top of the nearest unit. Birding between courses; a dining
room list here would be impressive.
26th
We left Kumul Lodge with the addition
of Dimorphic Fantail, and stopped again on the way to the airport.
This time one or two of us glimpsed the male Superb Bird of Paradise
through a scope (better views were to be had in the Tari Basin) and a 9+
flock of Yellow-breasted Bowerbirds came to feed on the bushes in front.
At Hagen airport we mingled with police
and security with rifles as we waited on the edge of the tarmac to board
the plane. When I protested that no-one in our group was really famous
enough to be abducted they told us there was a large shipment of gold (from
the Placer Dome-owned Porgera Mine) about to come in by helicopter and
be transferred to another flight.
Airlink,
now flying the "paper run" Madang-Lae-Goroka-Hagen and back 6 days a week
and Tari-Tabubil- Kiunga added on 2 days a week, is always a peasure to
fly with. Their 12 seaters fly low enough to see the beautiful landscapes
easily. And so we flew to Lae and found
our Thrifty vehicle not present.
It didn't come so, with luck, as no
other vehicle was available at the airport 40 km from Lae city, we managed
to find a local Lae company who had a 4wd available and drove it to the
airport for us.
In the very extensive Markham
Valley grasslands we saw Papuan Harrier, Collared Sparrowhawk,
and Australasian Pipit. Not much else to break the monotony of the
2 hour drive across the plain.
I had wanted to show the tour participants
how good the birding was through the forested hills on
the road to Madang, but with the 2 hour delay darkness fell
shortly after the forest birding was about to start. So we finished the
drive to Madang in the dark, arriving at 8pm, an hour later than I had
planned, and relatively birdless. No Doria's Hawks (I had seen 2 pairs
along here within 40 mins of each other many years ago and wanted to see
if we could have a repeat performance), no Vulturine Parrot (missed at
Kiunga-Tabubil), and no Lesser Birds of Paradise. Sorry guys.
To make matters worse, our booked
accommodation in Madang wasn't suitable
and we had a problem finding new beds as the town had three conferences
at once, one of them an international one.
27th
Problems continued to dog us all that
day. We tried to do some out-of-town birding before the Madang
Visitors and Cultural Centre opened at 0900 but only managed
River
(Common) Kingfisher and Singing Starling as new trip species
at Jais Aben Resort. So we went back
to the kindly Smugglers Inn for breakfast while I filled up and
reported in to the Cultural Centre before going up to Keki
Lodge.
The lodge owner was in town waiting
for us but had some more business to attend to before we could all travel
the 120km to his lodge together. So as late as midday we set off north-west
along the coast on one of PNG's best roads. After about 93 km we turned
off onto the track leading to Keki Lodge high (about 950m) in the hills.
The road was in poor shape but we managed to drive 18 km of it before we
realised our vehicle actually did NOT have 4wd. Amazing we got so far,
as Moyang (the Keki Lodge owner) told
us that the last 4wd vehicle to try getting in didn't get as far as we
did so they gave up.
We didn't. Spurred on by the certainty
of seeing a Fire-maned Bowerbird we abandoned the vehicle and shot up this
enormous hill which was followed by an easy walk to the bottom and then
another enormous hill (actually I took 4 hours to walk 9 kms, arriving
exhausted, the others beat me by half an hour). A 4wd wouldn't have got
up the last hill anyway, it's too narrow, so it would still be a 4 km uphill
walk to the lodge. (Moyang has a helicopter landing area which would suit
me fine next time).
28th
Keki Lodge
is in a forest glade, with a twenty-bird Lesser Bird of Paradise
lek beside, in the heart of Fire-maned Bowerbird country (we only
saw one female, perched for ages), and Vulturine Parrot often seen;
we saw one. For new birds, that was it, as we decided not to stay 2 nights
so we could have a go at the Emperor Bird of Paradise near the Nazab (Lae)
airport late the next day. (The Lae-Tari flight schedule is once a week
and we didn't dare miss it). So we walked 9 km down again.
If you can access Keki Lodge it would
be a good birding destination and deserves at least 2 or 3 nights. We actually
saw 25 species there (some on the way up), and another 16 heard - Red-legged
(Brown-collared) Megapode, Papuan Boobook (I thought it was Graeme playing
a tape at 0500 hrs beside their unit but it was the real thing - beside
their unit), Marbled Frogmouth, and Banded Robin among others.
We made it back to the vehicle in
less than 3 hours and drove carefully out. I must say everyone was very
supportive of my driving, each one of knowing that if we got stuck on this
very difficult and remote track one of us (me) would have to stay back
for at least 2 days to get another vehicle in to get this one out; very
time-consuming and expensive. So it was with relief that we came to the
main road and headed for Madang.
About 14 km out there is a missionary
settlement called Alexishafen where
we stopped to scrutinise the ponds. Spotted Whistling
Duck, (also seen easily later on at Pacific University near
Moresby), Australasian Little Grebe, (Eurasian Little Grebe is often
there too), Little Egret, and Comb-crested Jacana was the
full ponds' list (the White- browed Crakes heard only) but all new for
the trip.
A dull day and a half and an adventurous
day and a half, all without many new birds (although the Regent was new
for me), and looking back we could have done part of it much easier by
flying on to Madang on the 26th, hiring a high-clearance Toyota Hi-ace
with 4wd, and staying two nights (or even three) at Keki even if it meant
walking uphill for 2 hours, at the "end" of the usable road.
We plan to write to the local MP,
Peter Barter and the Hon Mathew Gubag MP, Provincial Works Manager, Parliament
House, PNG, to try to get some funds for a dozer to upgrade the road to
Salemben
Village where Keki Lodge is. If you would like to see the Fire-maned
Bowerbird you should do the same.
29th
We left Madang after breakfast and
to compound the mistakes and bad luck of the last two days I forgot to
pick up the packed lunch we had ordered so we drove to back Nazab
in 3.5+ hrs to have a cruddy lunch (again) in the airport "restaurant".
And waited for 2 hours for Eliot Harding,
our hoped-for Emperor Bird of Paradise contact to show up.
Originally my plan was to bird this
Madang-Nazab
road with my "club" group as I think it is one of the best birding
roads in PNG. But the Brits didn't want to waste time with general birding
so we simply drove right through. (I got my way with the next group 2 months
later and we all thoroughly enjoyed the birds and the great scenery along
this road).
But we were after BoPs.
Eliot didn't appear so we decided
to drive to the Boanna Rd site by the
Gain
School and see for ourselves whether the Bird of Paradise lek
was still there. At the t/o from the main road we stopped to make sure
that this was the road (it had been 7 years since I was last there) when
Eliot appeared. He had been waiting 2 hrs under the trees outside the airport
for us and we had been waiting 2 hrs inside for him. But he hadn't had
time to find the lek so we drove through the hills, stopping near the Gain
School without hearing any Paradisea noises, and stopped to look at a large
group of Grand Munias (only the third site I know for these birds).
Daylight was running out so we turned
back doing some general birding on the way out. Three Edward's Fig Parrots
popped into scopes, then further on several Paradisea species! Oh, Raggianas.
No Emperors seen or heard. Disappointed, we drove to Lae
and booked in to the Huon Gulf Motel/Hotel.
Quite adequate for tired bodies and
minds to recover in. And two rounds of SP lager for my second new trip
bird, the fig parrot. The tour had been mired in unfortunate, and, partly
through my narrowly-focussed logistics, sometimes unnecessary circumstances
for three and a half days with only 9 new birds to show for it. Fortunately
it was time to move on to better things.
30th
The Airlink
flight
Lae-Goroka-Hagen
was scenic and restful and the final leg into Tari
as
enjoyable as ever; it felt to me like coming home. And there was Steven
from Warili Lodge to meet us, the one
person I knew in a colourful crowd of about 1000 who often turn up to watch
Air
Niu Gini, with their much larger plane, land.
We had hired a 4wd (also without 4wd
as it transpired) from Mendi to meet us at Tari; Steven also had a vehicle
hired. We settled for the Mendi fellow as he had come so far but next time
we'll use the local guy, being cheaper for a start. We found by accident
that the Southern Highlands is no longer
a dry Province, so immediately bought a 2 dozen carton of small SP lager,
enough to last the four of us 4 days. Steven nosed around the most colourful
Tari
market buying fresh ingredients for his innovative cooking which
was nourishing and different every day, not like the much poorer quality
food dished up at Ekame and Keki. (I'm going back there this Sept so Ekame
Lodge food is about to improve!).
The road east toward Tari
Gap and Mendi had a dozer
working on it, the first time in over 10 years a machine has touched this
part of the road. What a difference! Warili Lodge
is about 28 km from Tari town and 2 km downhill from the famous Ambua
Lodge, a fraction of the price and quite comfortable. And although
relatively primitive, has supplies hot water for the bath house, has comfortable
beds, and now that we know that group transport is readily available, is
quite adequate for the average birder. Ambua Lodge,
where we will be staying this Sept, is much more sophisticated in some
ways but doesn't supply beer and the modern inner-sprung mattresses are
too hard (for me). The biggest thing it has over Warili is position; the
grounds abound with exotic birds, as at Kumul Lodge. You can see nearly
half the local bird popuation without leaving the grounds. But based from
Warili
Lodge, the only new trip species we saw that first afternoon
were Yellow-billed Lorikeet and Yellow-browed
Honeyeater (Melidectes), before the afternoon rain came.
1st July
First target bird was the Blue
Bird of Paradise, the Blue Kumul (a kumul is wild animal of
any sort), which my friend Benson (Hale) Hamoko
(cousin of Steven's and very good bird guide) led us to first thing and
showed us, from his village gardens just down the road. On the walk in,
there were two Bird of Paradise feeding trees where the female Blue was
and two female Lawe's Parotias (we never saw a male Lawe's properly
although males were guide-glimpsed twice as they dropped quickly out the
back of feeding trees - just large, black, shapes slipping quietly away
before someone made them into head-dresses). The male Blue, although calling
from a distant tree-top, was videoed and digitally photoed through various
telescopes for quite a while. Then we drove uphill past Ambua
Lodge to what I have always called Paradise Clearing, (because
of the number of Bird of Paradises found in it), just above the Bailey
Bridge which is about halfway up to Tari Gap, and the track
through it, Benson's Trail. We all agreed that calling the trail after
Phoebe Snetsinger (as has been mooted in recent years) was inappropriate.
And although Benson claims he helped make it and it is on his people's
land, we all agreed, including Benson, that it should be called by the
local area name, Henapipi, if anything.
Although late in the morning by this
time, we located a male King of Saxony BoP foraging quite low among
the moss-covered branches. It was watched and filmed for quite a while
and became best bird of the tour for Graeme. Other new birds were Hooded
Cuckooshrike and Garnet Robin.
Tari Gap
was voted as being a good late-morning tourist destination and so it was,
being a gloriously fine day up there although Red-collared Honeyeater
(Myzomela) was the only new bird we saw having spent three days at that
altitude already.
After a late lunch we agreed we should
all drive down off the hill and halfway back across the Tari
Basin to see the Papuan Sooty Owl, a nesting hole of
which had just been found. The land-owner climbed the trunk and slapped
it. An adult popped up and after realising many people were standing about
watching, it flew to a nearby tree and perched behind a few leaves. We
watched this excellent bird for a while and left as rain began to fall.
And another new bird for me and my personal best bird of the tour. A very
impressive owl.
We had agreed with Guy
Dutson, leader of the UK BirdQuest
group staying at Ambua, that this nest should have minimum disturbance
but it turned out that the one nestling had already been taken and eaten.
On our return two months later the nest had ben deserted, of course.
2nd
The concentration on Birds of Paradise
continued today. The best place for Short-tailed Paradigalla is the Ambua
Lodge carpark and adjacent areas so we walked the southern
Waterfalls
Trail where the Birdquest
group had seen it the previous day. Not on the first pass but a calling
male Loria's Bird of Paradise within 30m instead. There's a stroke
of luck. Graeme and Moira decided to wait back at the place the Paradigalla
had been seen the day before. Their luck continued as two birds came to
feed on the same moss-covered tree. On the Northern
or Large Waterfall Trail we found a Wattled Ploughbill
for those who hadn't seen them at Kumul; this and the driveway into Ambua
Lodge seem to be the best places to find this species.
On the road outside
Henapipi later in the day, we finally saw and photoed the male
Brown
Sicklebill, calling. What a noise! It sounds like about 4 machine-gun
shots fired per second, just as loud, repeated every few seconds. Other
new trip birds today, seen mainly on the southern Waterfalls
Trail in the morning, were Black Butcherbird, Black-bellied
Cuckooshrike, Black-breasted Boatbill (a little beauty), Brown-backed
Whistler, Black-throated Robin, Buff-faced and Large Scrubwrens, and
the lovely little Whiskered (Plum-faced) Lorikeet.
3rd
Late yesterday, an attempt to see
birds at Tari Gap again was foiled
by rain but watching from the Warili Lodge
porch this morning we could see that the top was probably clear although
showers were coming through where we were. So we tried again and found
calm, clear weather above the clouds. A Brown Quail was seen crossing
the road near the top, and Great Cuckoo Dove/s calling from various
song posts around The Gap were the
bird of the day; this species is usually very cautious and hard to see
but here they were sitting in the open, waiting to be photographed. Earlier
in the day and much lower down Black Pitohui was seen by Chris as
he spent another morning looking for the Paradigalla.
4th
Last morning on the Tari
Gap Road. Up at the Henapipi
clearing not a lot happened. Lesser Melampitta was guide-glimpsed
only and the same guide (me) saw and recorded the song of the White-eyed
Robin which would not re-appear to answer it's own call. But that's
birding. You have to take the bad with the good. Unfortunately it was good
for me only and it was my 4th new bird for the trip. This probably reflects
how hard birding is in PNG (some say the hardest in the world) that after
about 20 tours in various parts of the country I can still see that many
new birds on one tour. And in the places I usually tour in, there are still
18 species I haven't seen - Forest Bittern, Shovel-billed and Blue-black
Kingfishers, that sort of thing. For some of this stuff you should really
be on your own or with one other dedicated person; with a group, a lot
of unusual-bird sightings are just accidental unless you have a stake-out.
So at 0930 we said goodbye to Warili
Lodge (good place, go there, write Steven
Wari, Warili Backpackers Lodge, P.O.Box 159, Tari. Southern Highlands Province,
Papua New Guinea. Contact phone in Tari, [country code
675] 540 8014). And we set off on the now 45 min drive on the good
road to the aiport.
Air Niu Gini
(to
and from Tari on Mon, Wed, Fri, Sat) dropped us in Moresby
at 1305 hrs; we picked up our Avis
hire car and drove to Bluff Inn and
Varirata
NP again, this time getting right inside for a couple of hours
and added Papuan King Parrot, Yellow-billed Kingfisher (these birds
weren't calling much as I don't think they had started to nest yet), and
Rusty
Pitohui.
5th
Main target species today was the
Magnificent Riflebird which we had missed in the Kiunga-Tabubil area. A
recent claim by Beehler and Swaby that this Eastern race should be speciated
was made on the basis that the eastern-most PNG populations growled while
western populations, and those of northern Australia, whistled, although
the pitch and duration of the calls are similar. It seems that no intermediate
populations were sampled and I have heard a Magnificent Riflebird calling
at Lake Kutubu which was a cross between a whistle and a growl. Therefore
it seems more than possible that the calls of this species change gradually
along a cline; furthermore, even the whistles of the Cape York populations
differ. It seems that much more study needs to be done before another attempt
is made to split this species.
Anyway, we almost missed it again.
We had hired Augustus Kori, the Varirata
gateman and park ranger who has been there for over 10 years, to find this
bird on a calling post and he led us up the Gare's
Trail and through the forest to possibly the most remote Magnificent
Riflebird territory in the Park. But Chris did see it from the neck
down as it joined a feeding flock of Raggianas and Rusty Pitohuis. Two
or three pairs of Chestnut-backed Jewels were also there but they wouldn't
show themselves and the same happened with a nearby Brown-headed Kingfisher
which responded to a tape of it's own call by flying away to the other
end of the little gully we were in, more than once.
Finally, we gave up and returned to
civilisation. Although they are found throughout the Park, the best place
for Brown-headed Kingfisher is the short flat just near the start
of the Tree-house Trail. This is because the pair that live there are very
used to people - no tape is necessary, as we proved by getting one in the
scope within minutes of entering the trail from the car park. An excellent
bird.
Wallace's Fairy Wren was seen
here by Chris and unfortunately not by the Wallaces. I heard Chis exclaim
and begin to describe what he was looking at and so I whisked in behind
him but even then failed to see the bird; it moved very quickly out of
sight (from it's above head-height foraging) and was never seen again.
Spot-breasted Honeyeater (Meliphaga)
and Hooded Pitohui were there, and Black Myzomela and Spotted
Honeyeater seen on the Gares Trail,Black-faced
and Spot-winged Monarchs, and Pygmy Drongo, seen from the Circuit
Trail, and an excellent Fawn-breasted Bowerbird sitting in the
Birdquest scope in the car park, were the day's additions to our list.
6th
Final day in PNG; back to Varirata,
which has a total list of nearly 240 spp. Like any tropical forest, for
birding it can be anywhere between brilliant and abyssmal. The three musketeers
decided to try the Boundary Trail on
their own; it was abyssmal. I was pleased to be able to go off on by myself
and tried taping, then imitating, a pair of Crested Pitohuis which were
within metres (never saw them), then trying to find a calling post of a
nearby Magnificent Riflebird; abyssmal as well. So I gave up and by chance
(isn't that the best way sometimes?) a small feeding party of little birds
found me. Pygmy Drongo, Spot-winged Monarch, and a close view of
a Pale-billed Scrubwren.
We were all to meet at the carpark
about 1130. Chris had been scouting up the Creek
Trail toward Varirata Lookout
and glimpsed Dwarf Kingfisher, Black Berrypecker,
and also seen a female Mag Riflebird on a feeding tree. Off we went
to the tree, and waited for more than half an hour. The feeding party came
back and flew past, mainly Raggianas and Rusty Pitohuis again with a Black
Butcherbird - they are known as the Brown and Black Brigade.
We were about to give up when back
they came yet again. This time with a female Magnificent Riflebird
which foraged briefly on the feeding tree in front of us. Whew. Now we
can go.
We left the Bluff Inn for the last
time; good beds, good food (great steaks and fish), good beer, good birds
in the grounds, all at a good price. The nearby Pacific
University was our next target place; there we saw mostly common
Cairns-area water birds with the addition of Rufous-banded Honeyeater,
Black-backed Butcherbird, and Grey-headed Munia to finish off
the trip list.
Summary
In addition to the birds seen by the
tour group that are listed above, were 40 other species common to North
Australia, 4 guide-only seen species, and 22 heard-onlys, mostly by guides.
It was a pretty good trip, thanks
to Chris, Graeme and Moira for suggesting
the changes - after all I got 4 new species I wouldn't otherwise have!
Australia gives PNG a really bad press
so few Australians are general tourists to PNG. The market is dominated
by European, North American, and Japanese tourists. So thanks again to
the support from the UK, and commiserations to Steve who had to cancel
the tour at the last minute - it's still all there Steve, waiting for you.
And thanks to the US people coming this Sept, you can see by reading this
report that you will have a fascinating time in Papua New Guinea.
Andy Anderson
P.S. January 2004.
Maybe I was wrong about North Australians - 4 have signed up for the September
2004 PNG Tour already.