Showing posts with label Little Swift. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Little Swift. Show all posts

20 June 2020

Birding in the mountains - Abha

Abha is in the mountains of the southwest of Saudi Arabia where the weather is much cooler and wetter than other parts of the Kingdom. As a result, many different species of birds, animals and plants live in the area that are not seen in the area where I live in the east of the country. My last trip to the area allowed me to see and photograph a few species I do not see very often including Arabian Babbler, Little Rock Thrush and Little Swift and as I was there in the breeding season Cinnamon-breasted Bunting, Gambaga Flycatcher and Grey-headed Kingfisher. Another bird I photographed was Laughing Dove, a common bird throughout the Kingdom and seen daily in Dhahran where I live.
Arabian Babbler
Cinnamon-breasted Bunting
Gambaga Flycatcher
Grey-headed Kingfisher 
Laughing Dove
Little Rock Thrush - juvenile 
Little Rock Thrush - adult
Little Swift


17 October 2018

Little Swift Nesting – Wadi Grosbeak

Whilst birdwatching near Wadi Grosbeak in the Bani Saad area south of Taif, Phil Roberts and I found a number of Little Swift Nests on a building. The Little Swift is probably a breeding visitor from Africa as it is very scarce in November and December. in the southern Red Sea, Asir, Hejaz and the Tihamah areas. They are regularly seen near Jeddah and rarely Riyadh but are a vagrant in the Eastern Province where I live. The breeding range is from Jeddah southwards to Yemen. The photo of the nest below was taken by Phil who has kindly allowed me to use it on my website.


19 July 2015

No Arabian Golden-winged Grobeaks again - Al Atta

Whilst birding in the Taif area for the weekend of 3-4 Junly 2015 Phil Roberts and I went to Al Atta. The location is basically a set of fields where roses are grown with a few overhead power lines where the Arabian Golden-winged Grosbeaks were seen perched previously. There is also a wooded valley with relatively steep sides and tracks running up both sides. Despite spending many hours here we did not see or hear the Arabian Golden-winged Grosbeaks and to be truthful the site does not look too promising with much better looking areas nearby. This location is a good birding site with plenty of Arabian Wheatears and Yemen Linnets. Philby’s Partridge was heard and plenty of Tristram’s Starlings were flying around calling. Other good birds seen included a single Brown Woodland Warbler, Arabian Warbler, Little Rock Thrushes, Long-billed Pipits, Red-rumped Swallows, Pale Crag Martins, Little Swifts and Palestine Sunbirds. Although we did not see the Grosbeaks birding here was much more pleasant than when I came previously in January 2015 when the low cloud made birding extremely difficult. At least this time the sun was shining and you could see more than a few metres so birds could be seen and located. A dark phase Long-legged Buzzard was also seen on the way to the site just after Bani Saad.
Arabian Wheatear
Arabian Wheatear
Arabian Wheatear
Arabian Wheatear
Gambaga Flycatcher
Gambaga Flycatcher
Little Swift
Little Swift
Little Swift
Little Swift
Little Swift
Little Swift
Red-rumped Swallow
Red-rumped Swallow
Long-legged Buzzard - dark phase
Long-legged Buzzard - dark phase

11 August 2013

Malaki Dam Lake


Malaki Dam (also known as Malakiyah, Wadi Jizan Dam or Hakima Dam) is probably the largest and most variable expanse of freshwater habitats in the southwestern provinces of Saudi Arabia. This area is a large lake (17 04.72N, 42 97.88E) at the edge of the Asir foothills, 15km east of Abu Arish. It is fed by four main wadis and at high water levels the lake spreads to over ten square kilometres and has a large catchment area extending south into Yemen. The reservoir is bordered to the north by basaltic lava plains and to the south several rocky outcrops which form the edge of Wadi Juwwah, another excellent birding area. The surrounding acacia and salvadora scrubland is interspersed with Tamarix where the hills are grazed and cultivated with some areas with shallow water, the dead remains of flooded trees forming ideal roost sites for herons and egrets. The Lake is on a main migration route and its surrounding area has one of the highest diversities of breeding birds in Arabia with many species being of Afro-tropical origin accounting for the large number of species recorded. We bird-watched the area twice, once on the 1 July, our first morning after first looking at the coast at Jizan Corniche and the second time two days later, on 3 July when we arrived at the location at first light. It took us a bit of time to find the site on the first day, but it is easily located if you drive out of Abu Arish and continue on the road until the check point. Go through the check point for about two kilometres and then you will see a turn to the right which goes to Wadi Juwwah and a dirt track to the left which goes to the lake. This is only a small arm of the lake but it is less disturbed and has easier access than the other areas. Going to the Dam is useless, as you will not be allowed access through the gate. This site is excellent for the endemic Arabian Waxbill in the winter and spring, when flocks can be seen in the reeds and other vegetation near to the water, but by the mid-summer period all the birds appeared to have moved off and we failed to find any. There were, however, plenty of birds to see in this area and we stayed until dark hoping for Nubian Nightjar but failed to locate any along the dirt tracks by the side of the lake. This area is regarded by many of the birders who have bird-watched Saudi Arabia as the best single site in the entire country.
Ruppell's Waver making nest
The lake itself held a good amount of water and therefore had good numbers of water birds. Waders included 10+ Black-tailed Godwits, one Spur-winged Plover, one Common Sandpiper, Kentish Plover, five Green Sandpipers, six Common Greenshanks and five Black-winged Stilts. Ten Eurasian Spoonbill including adults and juveniles were present along with ten Hamerkops, 50+ Glossy Ibis, 10 Squacco Herons, one Little Bittern, three Western Cattle Egrets, one Little Egret and one Grey Heron. Other water birds included a Caspian Tern, three Little Terns, one adult male Pintail, three Northern Shoveler and an adult male Ferruginous Duck. Ten Common Moorhen and three Eurasian Coots were also seen and three Pink-backed Pelicans were a long way inland.
Black-tailed Godwit
Common Greenshank
Eurasian Spoonbill - adult
Eurasian Spoonbill - juvenile
Squacco Heron
Non water birds included three White-throated Bee-eaters, three African Collared Doves, five Zitting Cisticolas, ten Graceful Prinias, 20+ Ruppells Weavers, five Laughing Doves, 20+ Namaqua Doves, Eurasian Hoopoe and Arabian Babbler. Desert Lark was quite common but was very different to the pale sub-species we get in the Eastern Province being much darker in colouration. A few swifts were seen including 20+ African Palm Swifts and five Little Swifts hunting insects low over the water.
Arabian Babbler
African Palm Swift
Little Swift

An early morning trip arriving at first light 3 July proved very successful when we found two Gabar Goshawks sitting in a bush at the side of the track into the site. One was an adult male and the other a juvenile. We also had two White-browed Coucals in the same place, both of which were new specie for me in Saudi Arabia as well as an Abyssinian Roller. Other birds included 10+ Crested Larks, one Black-crowned Sparrow-lark, Nile Valley Sunbird, three White-spectacled Bulbul, 10+ Arabian Babblers and three Black Scrub Robins.
Gabar Goshawk - juvenile
Gabar Goshawk - adult
White-browed Coucal
We then went down to the lake and had similar birds to our previous trip. Whilst walking around looking for passerines in the reeds I saw a Small Buttonquail running along the edge of a field (17 01.582N, 42 59.694E). Luckily the species is not keen to flush and I got Phil onto the bird which gave reasonable views running down furrows and through the vegetation. This is a little known species in Saudi Arabia where it has been noted as an apparently rare resident in the extreme south-west (April bird observations in Saudi Arabia - King 1978). As far as I am aware there have been no recent records of the species and it is not recorded as being present in Saudi Arabia in the most recent field guide to the region the Helm Field Guides Birds of the Middle East - Richard Porter & Simon Aspinall (Aug 2010). Luckily I got a couple of photographs of the bird to confirm identification although it was obviously a Buttonquail on size and Small Buttonquail is the only Buttonquail of the region. As it is a poorly marked bird it is presumed to be a male as they are the duller of the two types in this species. Amazingly I had seen one the previous day near Sabya and then latter the same day saw another walking along the edge of the reeds across the lake in a different area. These sightings show the species is probably not rare but just poorly recorded, which is not too surprising given the low number of birders in Saudi Arabia, the species skulking nature, reluctance to fly and the fact that it is incredibly hot and humid and walking about in fields is probably not done too much even by birders who do go to the south-west in the summer.
Small Buttonquail