Showing posts with label anvayacove. Show all posts
Showing posts with label anvayacove. Show all posts

Sunday, April 5

A Field Guide to the Birds of Anvaya Cove

A while back, Anna G. asked if Adri and I were interested in writing for a field guide for the birds of Anvaya cove.  Of course we were!  We had been to Anvaya several times to help out the Beach and Nature Club Staff in guided trips for guests, residents and members.  It's great that the Ayala Land Group are actively considering native flora and fauna in their projects, hopefully it will be a trend for all local land development companies.




Congratulations to the entire team which brought this project to life on a very tight timeline!  Thank you to Tina S. and Mike A. of the Philippine Bird Photography Forum and Manny I. of Ayala Land Premiere for their generous contribution of their beautiful bird photographs.  

I wrote about the project on the bird club's monthly e-newsletter ebon.  Read more about the project here:

Friday, August 23

back in anvaya - twice!

last year, i began summer with a guided trip  for the staff and residents of the anvaya cove beach and nature club. this year, i was back, this time to begin the rainy season with another guided trip!

fortunately, the afternoon showers let up just in time for our afternoon birding. together with adri, anna, jessie and gina, we took a small group on a leisurely guided bird walk around anvaya's great lawn.  i was a little apprehensive as i thought that, minus the migrants, there would be less birds than last time. but i was not to worry as even as we were giving our introduction by the pool, there were already brahminy kites flying over plus white-breasted woodswallows, asian glossy starlings, colasisi and crows perched on a nearby mango tree!  we even had a philippine duck flying across, seen briefly by those with quick eyes! 

we were joined by a varied group: a trio of girlfriends, a family with three kids, parents, nannies and a lola, and some of the activities staff of anvaya. 


leisurely birding on the great lawn

we were soon pointing out several birds easily seen around the lawn and ponds fronting the main activities building including yellow-vented bulbuls, chestnut munias, striated grassbirds, black-naped orioles. several glossy swiftlets flying overhead. there were large flocks of lowland white-eyes moved noisily through the trees affording everyone with a chance to see these usually hyperactive birds through their binoculars.  the bright blue white collared kingfisher once again brought out exclamations of appreciation from everyone, and the little kids had a small tiff over who would look through the spotting scope first. 


chestnut munias are very common in anvaya

philippine pygmy woodpeckers, golden-bellied fly-eaters and a coppersmith barbet provided good examples of distinctive bird calls to demonstrate that bird watching is also bird listening!


golden-bellied flyeaters: noisy but hard to see


as we rounded the lawn to the start of our walk, a male pied bushchat perched on a lawn lamp was a good last bird for the day. it was hot and humid so everyone was a bit tired and parched but were all smiles. 


all eyes on a male pied bushchat

the next morning as we were leaving our overnight accommodations  anna and jessie pointed out a flock of asian glossy starlings just outside our doorstep in a mini-murmuration.


a small flock of asian glossy starlings

as we were saying our thanks and goodbyes to our hosts at the main building, adri and i spotted a southern sunbeam flitting across the sunny path, flashing its orange upperside. how apt, as the staff was also asking about the butterflies at anvaya!


Curetis tagalica showing its plain underside

it was a beautiful and sunny morning as we left anvaya that day.

a beautiful morning at anvaya



who would've thought that just 2 weekends after, adri and i would be back!

this time, it was a more technical activity, as adri was invited by the staff to give a bird photography talk plus a short bird photography walk.  we were not so lucky this time as the rain poured hard and long during the scheduled talk!  our audience dwindled as most of the guests who had signed up decided to back out because of the rains!

still, we pushed through with the activity.  under a small tent which barely protected us from the wind and rain, adri unflinchingly gave his talk. however, we could not ignore getting slowly cold and wet for very long and we finally decide to transfer to the kids playroom!  


hard core: bird watching & photography lecture in the pouring rain!

after the talk, the rain had mellowed into a light shower. the overcast skies plus the approaching sunset were not ideal for bird photography.  "we are waterproof but our cameras and lenses aren't!" exclaimed one of the participants! so we just birdwatched by the pool area, with a group of huddled white-breasted woodswallows afforded a brief photographic opportunity.  we wrapped up the activity with smiles and vow to repeat the activity in better weather.


white-breasted wood-swallows cuddling together: so that's why they're called git-git!

the rains finally let up and as the sun set, the sky blazed a fiery orange, and we contented ourselves with landscape photos.


a blazing sunset at the beach

adri and i had planned for an early start at subic the next day, but it was a beautiful morning with blue skies and  the call of the beach was irresistible.  we lazed by the beach, myself immersed in a book and adri on the coast chasing a couple of white-phase eastern reef egrets.


a pair of white phase eastern reef egrets


when he came back, he said he had "gifts" for me, and it turned out that he was able to photograph a couple of Papilionidae butterflies puddling on the sand! a green dragontail and a common jay! 


a puddling Lamproptera meges - missing its long tail

 another puddling butterfly: Graphium doson


more butterflies!  maybe next time we can fit in a little butterfly documentation in our schedule!

thanks again to anna g for organizing the our trip and to the anvaya activities staff for their continued promotion of the anvaya bird life!




Sunday, April 1

birding at anvaya: summer's here!

with the finals over, i was looking forward to joining anna g, jun o and karen o in leading a guided trip for the employees and members of anvaya cove beach and nature club. they picked me up immediately after (the longest ever) graduation of class 2012 and we took the 2 hour drive to morong, bataan via subic, arriving at almost midnight! i literally collapsed into the bed after my long day. call time was 530 the next morning.

i woke up refreshed despite my less than usual number of sleep hours. jun o was already outside the manager's quarters, watching a pied bushchat and some glossy starlings perched on a nearby leafless tree. the starlings were soon replaced by bar-bellied cuckoo shrikes with their distinctive calls.  then it was time for us to move to the main pavillion to start our guided trip!

the guided trip was a class on its own. we started at a tent set up by the main pavilion facing the landscaped lawn. chestnut munias, glossy swiftlets, yellow-vented bulbuls, eurasian tree swallows, a brown shrike and a striated grassbird, and even a small group of pet ducks led by a lone geese acted as true to life props for our introductory birding lecture. the munias were even building nests at the bamboo right beside the tent!

this grassbird provided a good "prop" to our outdoor lecture!

munias were busy building their nests right beside our lecture area

 it was an easy walk in the bright morning sunshine around the main lawn, many birds easily seen and even their calls heard clearly by the whole group.  the ever-reliable collared kingfisher with its brilliant blue and the stunning yellow black-naped orioles drew oooohs and aaaahs from the participants.  pretty soon, one of the staff members took charge of the scope, expertly focusing it on nearby birds for the others! karen spotted a common kingfisher perched on the pond plants, and a ripple of excitement went through the group. at the end of the hour and a half walk, everyone had good looks at at least 14 species! 

the participants gamely described the birds they saw through their bins 
and through the scope

a little egret was one of the more visible birds that morning

a pied triller sang and preened for several minutes, unmindful of his audience

the cabana complexes were all named after birds!

some of the staff and management participants expressed surprise at how much they enjoyed the morning birdwalk (something they obviously were not expecting)! among the guests, a couple had drove in all the way from manila the night before just to join the birdwalk, while a father and daughter tandem from san juan were enthusiastically sharing their own backyard birding anecdotes. the whole group ended the session with coffee and snacks back at the tent before going separate ways.

while the guiding team was having breakfast, the father and daughter tandem excitedly came up to us to show us a chestnut munia that had hit the glass walls of the restaurant!  the poor thing was dazed, and we suggested to merely let it rest in a quiet place to allow it to recover. the father offered to just allow it it rest on his open hand, and his daughter (and all the rest of us!) watched it recover until it surprised all of us by taking off after a few minutes!  his daughter, miki, then showed us her notes for the morning... a birdlist with side notes and even a sketch of the collared kingfisher!  a birder in the making!

bird strike victim recovering in hand

miki's notes: birder in the making!



after another lecture and a short brunch meeting with the activities manager and her team, we were free to do as we pleased for the rest of the afternoon.  while karen and anna decided to go for a quick dip in the pool, jun and i went to explore the nature and fitness trail.  we were able to add a few more species to our bird list for the day as we walked thru the trail which crisscrossed a stream several times.

busy woodpeckers at the nature trail

several of these lycaenids too!


as we made our way back to the pavillion, we stopped by the ponds on the main lawn again, happily clicking away at several chestnut munias, and even attempting to shoot at the glossy swiftlets gliding over the water.

munias still gathering nesting material


 there were several immature munias also



trying my luck with the glossy swiflets: blurred in flight



we caught up with karen and anna at the pool, and they advised us to climb up the tower across the pool for some eye-level views of lowland white-eyes.

it turns out, the white-eyes were building a nest!  the nest was hidden well away behind the leaves of the mango tree, and the pair ignored our ogling and shutters clicking away. gerygones hopped and sang noisily while ets's hung around.



a very charming pair of lowland white-eyes were busy with their nest building

can you see the very carefully hidden nest?

noisy gerygones filling the air with song


and a very sleepy ets

beach! the summer icon

pretty soon we were getting hungry and we all settled down by the pool for an early dinner (or was it a super late lunch?). as we chowed down, we noticed a white-breasted wood-swallow perching on a coconut tree by the pool and we thought how strange it looked.  as we watched, it suddenly plopped down at the space between the coconut leaves. another nest!  and this had the best location yet: poolside with a view of the beach!

a cozy wood-swallow nest by the pool


as the sunset, the staff teasingly asked us if we were ready to go yet, four hours behind our original schedule!

tropical drinks by the pool at the start of summer


a relaxing dinner by the pool at sunset after a day of dude birding: it was a great way to start the summer break!


thanks to anna for organizing and leading the team and to anvaya for their gracious hospitality!