Hello all,
I've been fortunate enough to have a last minute opportunity to head to Colombia for birding for the first time at the end of March! I've found a heap of great info on this site already (Antpitta'd's thread and Ross Gallardy's thorough report to name a couple). I've been particularly excited about the opportunities I've read about for birding in the Manizales area. I am looking for input on the rough itinerary for my trip - how many nights in each location do people recommend, hotspots I've overlooked, a more efficient route, etc. I'm planning about a 6 night trip (not nearly long enough) but could be convinced to add another night or so on to snag more lifers So far the hypothetical itinerary is:
Day 1: Arrive Bogota on red-eye, early flight to Pereira and bus to Manizales staying at Rio Blanco (2 nights?)
Day 2: Birding at Rio Blanco
Day 3: AM birding at Rio Blanco then head to Hotel Termales Ruiz (1 night)
Day 4: Up to Los Nevados with stops for Rufous-fronted parakeet. Night at Hacienda El Bosque (2 nights?)
Day 5 : Birding at Hacienda El Bosque
Day 6: Transport to Manizales then bus to Jardin for cock-of-the-rock lek (1 night?)
Day 7: bus to Medellin and onwards to Bogota and head home.
We're looking to maximize our time birding and minimize our time travelling, we'd love whenever possible to wake up at a lodge and roll out of bed onto the trails first thing. I'm most excited about the antpitta feeders, variety of hummingbirds and the possibility of seeing a mountain toucan! The detour up to Jardin at the end seems like a lot of travel time and effort but oh how I want to see a cock-of-the-rock...
On a slightly different thread - I was SO excited to read trip reports and see the species list at in Montezuma but, unsurprisingly, Montezuma Rainforest Ecolodge is booked solid until April and I just cant make those dates work. I want to know if anyone on here has stayed in Pueblo Rico and independently hired a guide and 4x4 transport to bird along Camino Montezuma? Surely there are other guides organizing tours up the mountain? Any leads on this would be appreciated.
Many thanks and happy birding - Lauren
I've been fortunate enough to have a last minute opportunity to head to Colombia for birding for the first time at the end of March! I've found a heap of great info on this site already (Antpitta'd's thread and Ross Gallardy's thorough report to name a couple). I've been particularly excited about the opportunities I've read about for birding in the Manizales area. I am looking for input on the rough itinerary for my trip - how many nights in each location do people recommend, hotspots I've overlooked, a more efficient route, etc. I'm planning about a 6 night trip (not nearly long enough) but could be convinced to add another night or so on to snag more lifers So far the hypothetical itinerary is:
Day 1: Arrive Bogota on red-eye, early flight to Pereira and bus to Manizales staying at Rio Blanco (2 nights?)
Day 2: Birding at Rio Blanco
Day 3: AM birding at Rio Blanco then head to Hotel Termales Ruiz (1 night)
Day 4: Up to Los Nevados with stops for Rufous-fronted parakeet. Night at Hacienda El Bosque (2 nights?)
Day 5 : Birding at Hacienda El Bosque
Day 6: Transport to Manizales then bus to Jardin for cock-of-the-rock lek (1 night?)
Day 7: bus to Medellin and onwards to Bogota and head home.
We're looking to maximize our time birding and minimize our time travelling, we'd love whenever possible to wake up at a lodge and roll out of bed onto the trails first thing. I'm most excited about the antpitta feeders, variety of hummingbirds and the possibility of seeing a mountain toucan! The detour up to Jardin at the end seems like a lot of travel time and effort but oh how I want to see a cock-of-the-rock...
On a slightly different thread - I was SO excited to read trip reports and see the species list at in Montezuma but, unsurprisingly, Montezuma Rainforest Ecolodge is booked solid until April and I just cant make those dates work. I want to know if anyone on here has stayed in Pueblo Rico and independently hired a guide and 4x4 transport to bird along Camino Montezuma? Surely there are other guides organizing tours up the mountain? Any leads on this would be appreciated.
Many thanks and happy birding - Lauren