| 3 Birdtour Asia Myanmar Custom tour Dec 2006 - Jan 2007
 
 
 Mount Victoria Babax, Mount Victoria
 We  finished the day in the scrubby pine zone we found Blue-throated Barbet, Grey  Treepie, a Scaly-breasted Wren-Babbler skulking in the roadside undergrowth and  finally a group of Red-faced Liocichlas in the scrubby roadside vegetation  which obliged by coming right out to feed on the side of the road.
 On  our second day we departed early and after two stops to enjoy Grey Nightjars  perched on the Jeep track we were eagerly awaiting sunrise high on the  mountain. As the first rays of sun hit the trees birds burst into life.  Chestnut-tailed Minla, Stripe-throated Yuhina, Vivid Niltava and near-endemic  Assam and Brown-capped Laughingthrushes were the first to appear in nearby  cherry trees, followed shortly afterwards a Darjeeling Woodpecker giving great  views then the excited piping-calls of the endemic White-browed Nuthatch drew  our attention to these stars of the area which appeared in a nearby tree and we  enjoyed excellent views of these striking birds – amazingly we were to enjoy  multiple sightings of this delightful birds on all but one day of our visit! We  spent the rest of the day walking down through the evergreen forest on the far  side of the mountain and new birds kept coming – a Scaly-breasted Wren-Babbler  responded well to playback and gave reasonable views but a Chin Hills  Wren-Babbler was more skulking, giving only fleeting glimpses, a flyover Ashy  Wood Pigeon, Rufous-bellied (and another Stripe-breasted) Woodpecker, good  views of wintering Grey-sided Thrushes, Green Shrike Babbler, Rusty-fronted and  Streak-throated Barwing, and a pair of White-tailed Nuthatches allowed a useful  comparison as they fed right alongside their commoner Chestnut-vented  relatives. Common-Hill Partridge, although calling loudly, couldn’t be seen on  the steep slopes but we did get good looks at a fast-moving party of Nepal  Fulvettas and a group of Black-browed Tits; another species which is surely  easier to see in Myanmar than anywhere else in its restricted range.
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