| ERROR : Server Busy(-1105)
ERROR : Server Busy(-1105) Pale-billed Woodpecker - Iain Campbell Tropical Birding tour report: The Yucutan and Palenque
 
 Pale-billed Woodpecker - Iain Campbell
 
 Slowly
 driving the entrance road at daybreak yielded nice looks at Great
 Curassow and
 Slaty-legged Tinamou. Collared Forest-Falcon and Common Potoo were seen
 flying
 across the road. If I had to think of one word to describe Calakmul it
 would be
 “awesome”. Picture walking through lowland
 rainforest and stumbling upon a
 decaying stone staircase. The vegetation is thick, and you can only see
 the
 first twenty stairs or so. As you ascend the stairs, you’re
 completely surrounded
 by layers of canopy. Finally, you reach the top of the staircase and
 turn
 around to see untouched rainforest in every direction, studded by a
 half a
 dozen ancient pyramids, peeking their heads out above the canopy.
 Awesome???in
 both senses of the word! As said by a participant,
 “It’s pristine jungle with
 no sign of man, except for the odd thousand-year-old pyramid here and
 there!” Birding
 the unexcavated grounds of Calakmul is very productive, especially at
 the
 resident army ant swarms. We found many species attending the swarms,
 including
 Tawny-winged Woodcreeper, Great Crested Flycatcher, Gray-headed
 Tanager,
 Gray-throated Chat, and Worm-eating, Kentucky, and Swainson’s
 Warblers. Mexican
 Antthrush was also a nice find.
 About
 10:00, we ascended
 another pyramid to look for raptors and were rewarded with amazing
 looks at a
 Black Hawk-Eagle, whistling as it soared just above our heads. Later in
 the
 day, another pyramid top served as a lovely base for digiscoping a very
 friendly group of Keel-billed Toucans. If you’ve ever
 wondered what it’s like
 to digiscope from the top of a pyramid, let me tell you, it’s
 pretty
 incredible!
 We
 spent more time in the
 afternoon with antswarms, where Northern Barred-Woodcreeper,
 Stub-tailed
 Spadebill, and Bright-rumped Atilla were new.
 
 4
 Feb:
 We
 started a bit later this morning since we saw the curassow the day
 before, but
 we were still treated to a Ruddy Quail-Dove on the road as we reentered
 Calakmul. We were greeted by the friendly Ocellated Turkey flock at the
 gate
 again, and the parking area was quite active as well. Three
 Black-headed
 Trogons were flying around as we got out of the car, and we soon after
 found a
 Lineated Woodpecker nest! We watched the woodpeckers for a quarter hour
 or so,
 changing guard to keep the eggs warm every few minutes. Just inside the
 ruins,
 we flushed about a hundred White-fronted Amazons from their
 roost???talk about
 noisy! The same location was home to a pair of spectacular Pale-billed
 Woodpeckers, whose nest we also found. More time at the antswarms
 yielded
 Ovenbird, Red-throated Ant-Tanager, Painted Bunting, and even a
 Roadside Hawk
 in attendance. Northern Beardless-Tyrannulet, White-collared Seedeater,
 and
 Golden-olive Woodpecker were also new. Gray-throated Chats proved to be
 curiously common here, as we saw as many as ten throughout the
 day.
 |