KenM
Well-known member
Three years since our last visit by courtesy of COVID, after a seamless three hour and fifty minute flight from LGW we were deposited into a sun setting Paphos, where the “stiff joints”were soon relaxed with a kebab washed down with a bottle of Othello then zzzzz til dawn.
Whence the seven days of non-stop hunting would start, averaging 7 miles per day, something that my “ankles” would confirm throughout.😩
The morning of the 20th got off to a fantastic start….with a presumed (no ref.material at hand) male Hooded Wheatear opening up my account!
Watching the bird pirouetting vertically high into the air after insects, then returning swiftly to rock base was almost breathtaking!, a gymnastic execution that would imo exceed any “flycatcher” attempts.
For me well worth the cover charge of €2.25 entrance to the Architectural ruin…and I’d only just begun!
Accompanying the “Hooded” were Northern and Isabelline Wheatears also Tawny and Red-throated Pipits, all regular at site and certainly a joy to reconnect with after such a long absence which hopefully will not return.
Moving on up towards the lighthouse the resident Crested Larks, Sardinian Warblers and prolific House Sparrows seemed to be never far away, when a quick scan through a rough grass area produced my first tick…Jackdaw!
Certainly never encountered on previous visits (perhaps something I should keep quiet about 😂)
In the same field adjacent to and North of the amphitheatre, I caught up with Whinchat and Woodchat Shrike also a flyover Hoopoe in support….things were looking good!
To be continued….
Whence the seven days of non-stop hunting would start, averaging 7 miles per day, something that my “ankles” would confirm throughout.😩
The morning of the 20th got off to a fantastic start….with a presumed (no ref.material at hand) male Hooded Wheatear opening up my account!
Watching the bird pirouetting vertically high into the air after insects, then returning swiftly to rock base was almost breathtaking!, a gymnastic execution that would imo exceed any “flycatcher” attempts.
For me well worth the cover charge of €2.25 entrance to the Architectural ruin…and I’d only just begun!
Accompanying the “Hooded” were Northern and Isabelline Wheatears also Tawny and Red-throated Pipits, all regular at site and certainly a joy to reconnect with after such a long absence which hopefully will not return.
Moving on up towards the lighthouse the resident Crested Larks, Sardinian Warblers and prolific House Sparrows seemed to be never far away, when a quick scan through a rough grass area produced my first tick…Jackdaw!
Certainly never encountered on previous visits (perhaps something I should keep quiet about 😂)
In the same field adjacent to and North of the amphitheatre, I caught up with Whinchat and Woodchat Shrike also a flyover Hoopoe in support….things were looking good!
To be continued….