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| CENTURY CLUB | ![]() |
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ABA DONOR TRIPTrinidad—Asa Wright Nature Centre with John Kricher and Paul Green
The American Birding Association's Donor Trip to Trinidad for Century Club members was led by John Kricher, Professor of Ecology at Wheaton College, Massachusetts and ABA Board Member, with logistical support from Martha Vaughan, Paul Green and Eng-Li Green. The trip was carefully planned by Nanci Hawley. 8 January 2003, Wednesday. Day one on the West Indian island of Trinidad
It was a clear, warm, star-filled night in the tropics, Orion looming overhead. After clearing customs, Mahase Ramlal, the son of Jogie Ramlal, met the group and this excellent father-son team became our guides for the week. We loaded ourselves into two red and white Toyota vans, our luggage following on a small pickup truck, and we were driven (in a very civilized fashion on the left side of the road) through a maze of small streets. Eventually we joined the Blanchisseuse Road at Arima, and wound our way up into the Northern Range toward the Asa Wright Nature Centre. We arrived at the Centre at about 2200h and were met by June, one of the staff at the Centre. She assigned rooms and informed us that sandwiches and water awaited us in the rooms. A chorus of crickets welcomed us to the land of the Oilbirds and bellbirds. During the night the resident Ferruginous Pygmy-Owl vocalized from time to time. 9 January 2003, Thursday. A day at the Asa Wright Nature Centre
We quickly came to know most of the "regulars:" the ubiquitous Bananaquit, the various tanagers, honeycreepers, hummingbirds, and thrushes. The earliest among us met the Blue-crowned Motmots, the first at the feeders. A male Chestnut Woodpecker stole the show for some minutes as it "hammered" on some bread (perhaps the bread was stale). Several Agoutis scampered below the feeders with Ruddy Ground-doves and Gray-fronted Doves. Telescopes soon picked up Channel-billed Toucans and Crested Oropendolas as well as a Double-toothed Kite in the distant trees. Breakfast was at 0730h, followed by meeting Jogie Ramlal, our main guide. Jogie's first job in his long career was that of a field assistant for William Beebe at Simla, the nearby research station that Beebe founded. Jogie has worked with Don Eckelberry, Arthur Singer, John Dunston, Richard ffrench, Jonnie Fiske, and David and Barbara Snow. There is little about the natural history of the Arima Valley that has escaped him.
We had lunch at noon, a very agreeable mélange of fish, fried plantains, and rice. Very Carib, and very tasty.
At about 1340h, the group, accompanied by Marguerite and Gail, began its first walk down the Discovery Trail to the famous leks of the White-bearded Manakins and Bearded Bellbirds. Weather continued to be pleasantly hot and delightfully clear. We stopped briefly to inspect a nest excavation of Lilac-tailed Parrotlets that Bob and Emmy Carras, who had arrived the previous day, had observed, but the small psitticines were nowhere to be found on this day.
We walked further along the trail and soon the demonstrative BOK! of the Bearded Bellbirds, which we had heard from the veranda, became much louder. The birds were nearby. Normally male Bearded Bellbirds remain either in the canopy or the subcanopy and, in spite of their bright white and black plumage, they can be devilishly difficult to find. They are more spread out than the manakins, as they use sound almost exclusively in the initial enticement to females. Luck was with us as we easily found not one but two male Bearded Bellbirds perched in trees directly over the sign that said "Bellbird Trail". Soon the scopes revealed the chestnut head and black fleshy wattles that decorate these birds, the wattles giving the name "bearded" to this species.
As we made our way uphill on our return to the Centre, some of us stopped again to linger with the bellbirds and later with the manakins. Once back on the veranda, tea and coffee were served at 1600h and rum punch made its appearance at 1800h, highlights of the civilized life of the birder at Asa Wright. As dusk approached, hummingbirds and Bananaquits were replaced at the nectar feeders by nectarivorous bats. We did our bird list at 1830h, followed by dinner at 1900h. After dinner, some of us watched part one of a Canadian video Twits and Pishers, that was filmed at the Asa Wright Centre. It featured the stellar performance of John Acorn who seemed to take particular delight in saying "oropen-DOUGH-lah." 10 January 2003, Friday. Blanchisseuse Road
After breakfast, we loaded into the two vans and Jogie and Mahase began our drive north, along the snaking Blanchisseuse Road (which translates to "laundress" from the French word blanchir, to make white), leading to the beaches of the Caribbean Sea. The road passes through the picturesque densely forested Northern Range, the easternmost extension of the Andes Mountains. Our first major stop yielded good looks at four Golden-headed Manakin males in the canopy along a curve in the road. Scopes made it possible to see their brilliant white eyes as two males often sat in immediate proximity of one another. They were not "dancing", but they looked good.
We ambled along, stopping to observe a Green Kingfisher along a river, and eventually came to the beaches at the town of Blanchisseuse, our lunch stop. Brown Pelicans and Magnificent Frigatebirds cruised along the shore as the wind stirred up the warm Caribbean Sea. After lunch, we walked the palm-lined beach to a nearby marsh and lagoon where we encountered Striated Heron, White-winged and Southern Rough-winged Swallows, and some migrant Spotted Sandpipers.
Once back at the Asa Wright Centre we refreshed ourselves with rum punches followed by a lamb dinner. After dinner we enjoyed the second installment of Twits and Pishers, which, appropriately enough, featured the Blanchisseuse Road. The night was clear and starry. |
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