Some great birds today at Mandria and Paphos headland. It was a beautiful warm
and sunny morning but this afternoon after 2pm thunderstorms rolled in one
after the other with not much more than 20 minutes break between them and
they're still going now at 7pm here. It's dark here now but I just drove to
the supermarket and at times the whole sky turned white as lightening struck
and then seconds later it felt like the earth was shaking as the thunder came.
Torrential rain during the storms, I'm glad I brought my wellies! A
breathtaking experience but one afternoon is enough thanks very much. Hopefully the weather will bring yet more birds.
Anyway, best birds today were wryneck, rufous-tailed rock thrush, Caspian
stonechat, a decent passage of Baltic gulls, isabelline shrike, black-winged
stilt and a night heron. In between the storms a female pallid harrier flew
through Mandria.
Wrynecks are fabulous birds and this is the best view I've had for a long
time.
I managed to find my third Caspian stonechat of the holiday at Paphos Headland following the pair found by Matt Smith at Mandria the
other day. There was one on the headland couple of days ago but looking at the photos of that bird it appears to have a slightly different tail pattern and browner upperparts, perhaps making it a young bird. I would say todays bird is an adult, in the field it really stood out as black and white with just a small patch of bright orange on its breast, quite a stunning sight. As I said in a previous post,
Caspian stonechat is actually Siberian stonechat of the race
hemprichii.
The tail pattern makes it hemprichii. The regular Siberian and our
European stonechats have tails that are completely black. Apparently almost all Siberian stonechats that pass through Cyprus are hemprichii.
This is the same isabelline shrike that I saw last December.
Night heron.
Back at Mandria this afternoon the approaching storms brought some dramatic
skies and also a passage of gulls, mainly yellow-legged but also about 20 Baltic
gulls. These are a race of lesser black-back but are much blacker than the
bird we see in the UK, blacker even than Greater black-back, if that's
possible!
In the UK we get two races of lesser black-back, graellsii and intermedius. Neither of these races occur in Cyprus, instead here they get fuscus (Baltic gull) and heuglini (Heuglin's / Siberian gull). Both are pretty scarce, especially Heuglin's which is really only a winter visitor to Cyprus in very small numbers. Baltic gull is more of a passage migrant in Cyprus. Heuglin's is a larger and paler bird than Baltic, more like graellsii whereas Baltic is smaller and slimmer, often appearing longer winged and is the blackest of all gulls, with no contrast between the primaries and the rest of the wing, and virtually no mirrors.
Black-winged stilt on the beach at Mandria.
Run for it!!
Fortunately Paphos Headland is a World Heritage Site because of its impressive archeological ruins and the mosaics are protected by buildings with roofs! Time to take in some culture while the rain passes......



















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