3 Sept 2017

Qinghai - Birding around Yushu, 22nd to 24th August 2017

Tibetan Ground Tit - Pseudopodoces humilis

We arrived in Yushu, se Qinghai on 22nd August.  We were due to join some friends for a fairly intensive high-elevation tour on the 25th, so arrived early to acclimatise.  

Yushu (“Jyekyundo” in Tibetan) lies at 3,900 m.  We had last been there in 2007.

It was badly damaged by an earthquake in 2010.

So with a couple of spare days to fill, the first thing we did was to pop round to the town’s Xinhua Bookstore for a local map.  For a modest outlay of 6 RMB we got a sheet with a city map on one side and a map of Yushu Prefecture on the other, bordered by pictures of local attractions.


Yushu City, Qinghai

Up at the “Tagdar lookout” we had views of the city, some rather shy Pikas, and a Little Owl in the last couple of hours of daylight. The map gave us an excuse to chat with the locals about what to see.

Little Owl - Athene noctua

On the map was a photo of Black-necked Cranes with an arrow to where they could be found; - Long Bao National Nature Reserve, about 70 km northwest of town on Route S308. The locals concurred that the area was “good for birds”.

On the morning of 23rd August we headed out to Long Bao NNR, and and saw quite a lot of stuff from the road.  We had hired a Taxi for the morning, and the driver seemed to enjoy the outing, too. 

The S 308 road runs across the valley floor at 4,200metres


Black-necked Cranes were there, in four different family groups. There were Whiskered and Common Terns, Bar-headed Geese and Ruddy Shelduck.  It was probably a bit late in the breeding season to see all the summer breeders.

Long Bao NNR was reported on - as a potential Ramsar Site - in the Oriental Bird Club publication, FORKTAIL (Issue 29) in 2013.

Black-necked Crane - Grus nigricollis

A Red Fox with a pika in its’ mouth was an early highlight (but not for the pika, obviously.)

Red Fox - Vulpes vulpes

Red Fox - Vulpes vulpes

A dense population of Pikas was a sight to behold.  

Plateau Pika - Ochotona curzoniae

Plateau Pika - Ochotona curzoniae

Plateau Pika - Ochotona curzoniae

Mountain Vole - Sp.

Mountain Vole - Sp.

Mountain Vole - Sp.

Himalayan Marmot - Marmota himalayana

Snowfinches included Rufous-necked and White-rumped.  

Rufous-necked Snowfinch - Pyrgilauda ruficollis

White-rumped Snowfinch - Onychostruthus taczanowski

Confiding Tibetan Ground Tits were everywhere.

Tibetan Ground Tit - Pseudopodoces humilis

Tibetan Ground Tit - Pseudopodoces humilis

On the way back to town we passed a Tibetan Wedding party, and also later saw some Himalayan Griffon Vultures on the ground close to the road.


Himalayan Griffon Vulture - Gyps himalayensis


                                                                                         **************

A chat with some local had revealed that Le Ba Gou - a popular weekend picnic area, was also good for birds, so we headed that way the following day (24th August).  It was 30km east of Yushu on the old main road, G214.

The area is part of the San Jiang Yuan (Three Rivers) National Nature Reserve. 

Ibisbill - Ibidoryncha struthersii

We were lucky to find one Ibisbill from the old road, but this juvenile had a drooping right wing, so we wondered how long it would survive.

A party of Common Mergansers at the rivers edge was a nice find, 

Common Merganser - Mergus squamatus

but even better, soon afterwards we interrupted a large party of Tibetan Partridges going down for their morning drink.


Tibetan Partridge - Perdix hodgsoniae

Tibetan Partridge - Perdix hodgsoniae


The rocky hillsides were a good environment for the attractive Glover's Pika.

Glover's Pika - Ochotona gloveri



White Eared Pheasants were spied on the hillside as well. A party of twelve with at least two young.  

White Eared Pheasant - Crossoptilon crossoptilon

In the picturesque valley of Le Ba Gou we saw many Elliot’s Laughingthrushes...

Elliot's Laughingthrush - Trochalopteron ellioti

Le Ba Gou, or "Ziqiong Valley"

A plaque near a picnic area declared that the area is also known as "Ziqiong Valley".

Horsewoman

We did a circuit, following a paved road over the mountaintops to Batang, near Yushu Airport. 

Mountain Pass




In fact the road comes out to route G 214 near Princess Wencheng Temple, south of town,  near the airport.  The new PW temple is bigger and a lot more ornate  than ithe earlier version which we had visited in 2007.  There seems to be a lot of rock-carving and painting going on all over the county.

Two birding half-days were enough for us in Yushu’s thin atmosphere, but we felt we were adapting well.


17 Aug 2017

Inner Mongolia, March 2017



Shore (formerly "Horned") Lark - Eremophila alpestris

There’s nothing like the swelter of August in HK to cause me to hark back to the cool few days in March we spent in Inner Mongolia, near the Chinese border with Russia.

We travelled with Mengxiu TONG of China Wild Tour in a small group.


It was well below freezing on most days near Hulun Lake, where Snowy Owls are usually present in winter, but this was a poor year and we dipped.

This ground has been covered by Terry Townshend in his Birding Beijing blog.  


Corsac Fox

Traditional lifestyle

21st-century lifestyle

Stuck again !


Black-throated Snowfinch - Pyrgilauda davidiana




Still, there were plenty of other things to look at….

Craig Brelsford of Shanghai Birding was there in January this year.

Manzhouli - "Border Town" architecture

We moved on after three days, east from Manzhouli to Yakeshi on the train, then were driven to the town of Wu’erqihan.  This is an area of low snowy hills and willow-covered river valleys, with plenty of birds to look at too. 

This ground has also been covered by Terry Townshend in his Birding Beijing blog.  








Ural Owl - Strix uralensis


Willow Tit - Poecile montanus

Bohemian waxwing - Bombycilla garrulus


Asian Rosy Finch - Leucosticta arctoa

Wild Boar - Sus scrofa




Eurasian Bullfinches - Pyrrhula pyrrhula (race:cineracea?)


Eurasian Bullfinch - Pyrrhula pyrrhula (race:cineracea?)

Great Grey Owl - Strix nebulosa

Great Grey Owl - Strix nebulosa



Little Owl - Athene noctua

Black Woodpecker - Dryocopus martius


Great Grey Owl - Strix nebulosa


Black Grouse - Lyrurus tetrix

Three-toed Woodpecker - Picoides tridactylus

Black-billed Capercaillie - Tetrao parvirostris

Black-billed Capercaillie - Tetrao parvirostris

Siberian Jay - Perisoreus infaustus

Long-tailed Tit - Aegithalos caudatus

Hazel Grouse - Tetrastes bonasia


Eurasian Nuthatch - Sitta europea

Long-tailed Rosefinch - Uragus sibiricus



The local driver/guides in the area have been running tours for five or six years now.  They are very good at knowing where the birds are likely to be, and it would be easy to get lost on a self-driven tour.


It was great fun, but thermal undies were absolutely essential !