Atlasville, 25th April 2007
Just back from a week working in the Lubumbashi area of the DRC. I went with high hopes of adding a few birds to my Africa list, as this area boasts some 450 species, 10% of which are not found south of the Zambezi.
Based at a guest house in Lubumbashi a lot of my time was spent commuting to an exploration site in Luishia some 75 km NW from Lubumbashi. The rains are over and the hard shoulders of the main road are very dusty, so the clouds of dust hanging in the air and coating all the roadside vegetation was not too conducive to good birding. Not that I would have been able to do much at 60-80 kph anyway. One good sighting on one of these commutes was an overflying Ross’s Turaco, my second sighting of this colourful bird, the first in Tanzania some 10 years ago.
At the exploration site the presence of very noisy drill rigs was also a big deterrent and I got but fleeting glimpses of sunbirds, finches, bulbuls and warblers, those families with the most potential for new species.
My trip list for the week was a massive 22 species – due to a combination of the factors above and that I was of course working and had no time to do any proper birding. Those birds that I managed to see “on the run” were mainly very common Southern African species:
Bateleur
Long-crested Eagle
Dark-capped Bulbul (now regarded as a sub-species of Common Bulbul)
Yellow-fronted Canary
Pied Crow
Namaqua Dove
Cape Turtle Dove
Rock Dove
Common Fiscal (a recent split makes this the Northern Fiscal – a retrospective lifer)
Crowned Hornbill
Tawny-flanked Prinia
House Sparrow
Northern Grey-headed Sparrow (even this wasn’t new as I ticked it in Zanzibar 2 years ago)
Amethyst Sunbird
Copper Sunbird
Greater Striped Swallow
Common Swift
Ross’s Turaco
African Pied Wagtail
Blue Waxbill
Red-collared Widow
Broad-tailed Paradise Whydah
The Waxbill caused the most pain, as the area boasts both Blue Waxbill and Red-cheeked Cordonbleu. Try as I might I could find none with a red cheek, so had to settle for our Blousysie.
The Copper Sunbird was an “almost lifer”, arriving in the bottle-brush tree next to me as I enjoyed a beer in the hotel garden late on my last afternoon in Lubumbashi. I say “almost lifer” as I had photographed this bird in Lochinvar National Park in Zambia in 1974, long before I considered myself a birder and started keeping lists.
The last on the list was my only lifer of the trip. A flock of >50, including 6-8 males in breeding plumage, within a kilometre and five minutes of Lubumbashi International Airport on my way home!