A day in Eilat
In 1986 I spent two weeks driving around Israel with my good friend Sean McMinn. We spent most of the time in the very south of the country at Eilat. On such a winter's evening - dark and damp if not chilly - it is a boost to look back on warmer and bird-filled times...
March 25th 1986
The heavy rain that fell in the early
hours had stopped by dawn. Thankfully the tent had proven its claim to be
waterproof. We awoke to a cloudy and cool dawn with a northerly breeze. After a
brief and modest breakfast, Sean and I drove out towards the fabled km32.
Km32 literally referred to a kilometre
distance marker that was to be found along the roadside that led northwards out
of Eilat. There was, no doubt, also a km31 and a km33 post in existence, but
for some reason lost in time, birders kept driving the 15 minutes from Eilat to
km32 and km32 only, parking their cars and walking out into the desert towards
the Jordanian border. It was consistently good for desert species. Nearby
places had been tried but didn’t seem to produce similar results. On the
surface it didn’t look any different from nearby habitat, being a flat stony
desert with isolated clumps of low vegetation. It could have been that a chance
stop at this spot by birders a few years previously had turned up a good
selection of birds, and that, because of this success, others returned hoping
to emulate them. Once it was established that you were guaranteed to see a list
of desirable desert species, then the need to go elsewhere was missing.
On getting out of the car, two things
immediately struck us. The first was that the air was filled with the song and
striking flight displays of Hoopoe Larks. These birds performed immaculately,
always in view and visually striking, flashing black and white wings and tail
as they collapsed back to earth from their aerial manoeuvres. At least nine
were present. Secondly was the virtual opaqueness of the light, caused by the
low pearly-grey cloud which merged into the pale mono-colour of the desert,
causing near ‘snow-blindness’ – maybe better termed ‘desert-blindness’. The
light still maintained a luminescence that lit the birds we were watching in
an ethereal light and added a certain reverence to the proceedings.
After flushing a Stone Curlew we then
came across the first of seven Bar-tailed Desert Larks. These birds appeared
almost finch-like rather than lark-like, having finer proportions compared to a
Desert Lark. The upper parts were a warm sandy-orange and the tail exhibited a
prominent and well demarcated outer band. We heard several sing – a discordant,
simple sound, like an un-oiled hinge. Desert Larks were the commonest species
present. At least 75 birds littered the area, a combination of small flocks and
the odd single displaying bird. We were witnessing a select group of
species. They were all desert specialists, and, even if it comes across as
being complacent towards many species that we has so far seen in Israel, there
were no ‘filler’ species in between those that were very much targets – each
and every one observed a sought after bird.
An unfamiliar call overhead had us
both frantically looking into the flat greyness of the sky, at first unable to
see what was making the noise. Sean then picked up two Temminck’s Horned Lark’s
that all too quickly flew passed us and across the road without stopping. I was
quite keen to see this species much more closely, but it was all we would be
allowed to see of this particular lark. We wandered further into the desert
and were pleasantly surprised to find a
most confiding female Spectacled Warbler perched on top of a low bush. Whilst
watching it, a movement in the shade under a nearby bush revealed itself to be
a Desert Warbler, the first of four. All had sandy-buff upper parts that
contrasted with rusty red tails. Our last ‘new’ species for the morning
was a female Desert Wheatear that flew in, paused briefly, then hurried on
northwards. After a male and female Black-eared Wheatear put in an appearance
we slowly strolled back to the car, drinking in the atmosphere provided by the
displaying larks and the desert habitat. At this point we could have carried
north a short distance to try and see a Lappet-faced Vulture, a traditional
stakeout being situated in an area of mature acacia close to the road. However,
it hadn’t been seen during the past week, so we assumed that would obviously
mean that neither would we. How bloody defeatist.
We drove back to Eilat buoyed by a
marvellous couple of hours birding and headed straight for the northern fields
and the ringers tent. We had timed it just right as we were immediately shown
both a Baillon’s Crake and a Spotted Crake in the hand. The bright chestnut
upper parts of the former made the latter appear dowdy, but then the Spotted
was still a smart, and much larger bird.
It was quite clear that there had been
a fall as every bush leapt with warblers and the fields once again played host
to feeding migrants. The most obvious component of the arrival were Lesser
Whitethroats, with at least 100 being recorded. For the next couple of hours we
were able to add Turtle Dove (11), Tree Pipit (18), Red-throated Pipit (70),
Flava Wagtail (200), Sedge Warbler (30), Reed Warbler (10), Olivaceous Warbler
(5), Orphean Warbler (3), Blackcap (6), Whitethroat (5), Ruppell’s Warbler (8),
Willow Warbler (2), Chiffchaff (25), Bonelli’s Warbler (17), Wheatear (40),
Black-eared Wheatear (4), Redstart (1) and Nightingale (1).
It was not just a case of keeping our
eyes peeled to the ground as a steady raptor passage was underway. Steppe
Buzzards numbered over 100, our Black Kite total reached 38 and single Steppe
Eagle and Booted Eagle kept us guessing as to what was to come next. What came next
was an immature eagle that flew low northwards that defied identification. We
were, at the time, standing next to one of Europe’s foremost raptor experts (Dick Forsman),
and even he shook his head as the bird disappeared. If he couldn’t nail it, what chance did we have? A melanistic Marsh Harrier then
added interest, before the ringers trapped a Barbary Falcon, which on release
was chased by a Lanner Falcon.
Hirundines were gathering over the
alfalfa and for the first time since we had been in Israel we were seeing House
Martins in some number, although the 16 recorded compared unfavourably with the
numbers of Sand Martin (60), Swallow (200) and Red-rumped Swallow (40) also
present. All of this activity was going on to
the overhead calls of Bee-eaters, enjoying another day of passage, our total
reaching 60, almost entirely made up of ones and twos apart from a single flock
of 12.
After lunch we positioned ourselves
along the reed fringed sewage canal that ran alongside the saltpans. The
overhead passage was easily observed from here and we were surrounded by
excellent habitat. We completed a hat-trick of crakes when a Little Crake was
found feeding in the ditch, soon to be joined by another two, all three feeding
unconcernedly as we sat and watched. How many more crakes had been brought down
by the rain and remained unseen? A Penduline Tit then decided that this
was a good moment to start giving its Reed Bunting-like call from the reeds
directly in front of us. After a brief game of hide-and-seek it gave itself up,
a splendid male, before a female also revealed herself nearby. From where we were standing the
salt-pans were directly behind us, so we kept an eye out for what was happening
there. Not a lot really if truth be told. Little Stint numbers had increased to
29 and our long-staying Collared Pratincole had been joined by five others. The 38 Slender-billed Gulls
were just loafing around, slightly listless, a bit like us.
An afternoon traipse around the date
palms produced the expected haul of that triumvirate of plantation dwellers:
Wryneck, Bluethroat and Hoopoe. As we emerged from the trees four Cattle Egrets
flew north. We then went on a brief tour of the
parks of Eilat town, each oasis holding the odd warbler (normally a Lesser
Whitethroat), but generally little of note until we visited a green space that
also boasted a reed-fringed pool. Here we heard a further Penduline Tit that
managed to elude our binoculars.
We ended the day by looking out to
sea. A couple of Cormorants were offshore, sat in front of the dwindling duck
raft, which numbered only 150 Garganey and 10 Shoveler. On the beach, a
first-winter Great Black-headed Gull was good value and kept us amused until
three Sandwich Terns and a winter-plumaged Caspian Tern came close inshore. By the end of the day we had seen 96
species, a terrific total for a small area.
Comments