TRANSYLVANIA 2007
“Once more our Hortobagy-Transylvania
pairing proved to be the perfect sandwich albeit one with no bread either side:
just three layers of filling.
Our first 24 hours in Hungary provided the by-now
traditional combination of quantity and quality – over a hundred species
including several on the IUCN Red List and six of world conservation
importance: Lesser White-fronted Goose, Eastern Imperial Eagle, and Great
Bustard (all globally threatened species), plus Pygmy Cormorant, Ferruginous Duck,
and White-tailed Eagle (all ‘near threatened’). The equally-impressive
supporting cast ranged throughout the whole spectrum of both non-passerines and
passerines, from Great Bittern to Corn Bunting and including Black-crowned
Night Heron, Eurasian Spoonbill, Common Shelduck, Garganey, Pallid Harrier, Saker,
Crane, Avocet, Stone Curlew, a trip of 22 Dotterel, Little Stint, Spotted
Redshank, Whiskered Tern, Little Owl, Kingfisher, Red-throated Pipit, Bearded
Tit, Eurasian Penduline Tit, and Great Grey Shrike.
It would be difficult to imagine a better day’s birding anywhere in
Even so, our travelling day which followed added 17 new
species: Little, Great Crested, and Red-necked Grebes, Little Egret, Black
Stork, Tufted Duck, Sparrowhawk, Greenshank, Common
Sandpiper, Ruddy Turnstone (a rarity so far from the coast), Common Gull,
Syrian Woodpecker, white-headed Long-tailed Tit, Marsh Tit, Nuthatch,
Greenfinch, and Hawfinch. And our arrival at our destination in
Our first walk in Transylvania yielded a classic
high-altitude coniferous-forest selection: Goshawk, Three-toed Woodpecker,
(satisfying ‘scope views), close comparisons of Goldcrest
and Firecrest and Marsh and Willow Tits, Crested Tit,
Coal Tit, Common Treecreeper, Nutcracker (both in
flight and perched), Siskin,. Crossbill, a pair of obliging Bullfinches beside
the track, and over a hundred Hawfinches – plus Water Pipits and Grey Wagtails
on the mountain top. We went to bed happy and content as the day closed with
views of a magnificent tawny-shouldered European Brown Bear.
Memorable images from the following day included a singing
Ring Ouzel perched like the fairy on a Christmas Tree and a Dipper posing on a
mid stream rock with a Fire Salamander at its feet. But bird of the day (indeed
voted bird of the trip, only two points short of the possible maximum) was a Wallcreeper - more butterfly than bird (and understandably
known in China as the ‘rock flower’) - which semaphored close and continuous
until we eventually walked away.
Another full moon later saw us back in the coniferous forest
at 5000 feet with a picnic breakfast and lunch in the hotel was followed by a
visit to Szentpŕli fishponds (another Great Bittern
plus Hobby and Purple Heron which were new for us) and to Kaloda
beech forest and meadows (Woodlarks, Green Woodpeckers, and Fieldfares).
Then came atmospheric Sighisoara with its film-set main square, romantic castle
and clock tower, and photogenic old houses which still looks largely as it did
when Dracula lived there in the fifteenth century. Equally photogenic - and
equally evocative of life in times gone by - were the houses in the UNESCO
World Heritage Village of Torocko, some of which
housed us for our final night in
Back in the Hortobagy, our tight
schedule worked to perfection: almost instant Middle Spotted Woodpeckers and
Short-toed Treecreepers in Debrecen great wood;
thirty Long-eared Owls in Balmazújváros town centre
and Wood Sandpiper at the sewage farm; and Long-legged Buzzard and Northern
Wheatear at Szeg - leaving us time to drive out over Cserepes puszta to await in
absolute silence the evening flight of the Lesser Whitefronts
from the fishponds to a grazing area. On cue they came - a flock of fifty with
four more following (half the European population of
This alone would have made a sufficient grand finale. But
our final morning was no anticlimax. A return visit to the Hortobagy
fishpond where we began presented us not only with a welcome reprise of a range
of species from Spoonbill to Bearded Tit (over a hundred of them and feeding on
the path just yards ahead of us) but also a White Pelican (a new bird for
Bryan’s Hungary list and only the second for Zoltan)
and the first Tundra Bean Goose of the winter flying in to join thousands of
Greylags and a smaller flock of Lesser Whitethroats in the bright morning
sunlight. A wonderful finish.
A significant feature of this year’s trip was our amazing
luck with the weather - dry sunny days which enabled us to drive to many
localities inaccessible in wet conditions (despite the four days of continuous
rain in the Hortobagy between our two visits). This,
and the coincidence of the full moon, gave us magnificent sunrises and sunsets
and thrilling moon views - at times as red as the sun, at others as pale as a
primrose. Other bonuses were the fine lunches at Hortobagy
czarda (with gypsy cimbalon,
violin, and doublebass trio entertaining us) and the Tiszacsege czarda (surely the tastiest
fish soup ever), together with the varied evening meals washed down with
surprisingly fine wines, local beers, and fruit brandies. Mountains and puszta looked equally photogenic in the clear light and
never have the autumn colours looked more splendid.” Bryan Bland
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A |
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B |
C |
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3 |
Little
Grebe |
4 |
45 |
|
Tachybaptus ruficollis |
|
3 |
Great
Crested Grebe |
2 |
1000 |
|
Podiceps cristatus |
|
3 |
Red-necked
Grebe |
1 |
1 |
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Podiceps grisegena |
|
2 |
Black-necked
Grebe |
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|
|
Podiceps nigricollis |
|
1 |
White
Pelican |
1 |
1 |
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Pelecanus onocrotalus |
|
3 |
Great
Cormorant |
4 |
60 |
|
Phalacrocorax carbo |
|
3 |
Pygmy
Cormorant |
1 |
3 |
|
Phalacrocorax pygmeus |
|
2 |
Great
Bittern |
2 |
1 |
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Botaurus stellaris |
|
1 |
Little
Bittern |
|
|
|
Ixobrychus minutes |
|
3 |
Black-crowned
Night Heron |
1 |
3 |
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Nycticorax nycticorax |
|
2 |
Squacco Heron |
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|
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Ardeola ralloides |
|
1 |
Cattle
Egret |
|
|
|
Bubulcus ibis |
|
3 |
Little
Egret |
1 |
1 |
|
Egretta garzetta |
|
3 |
Great
Egret |
6 |
100 |
|
Egretta alba |
|
3 |
Grey
Heron |
6 |
80 |
|
Ardea cinerea |
|
3 |
Purple
Heron |
1 |
1 |
|
Ardea purpurea |
|
3 |
Black
Stork |
1 |
1 |
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Ciconia nigra |
|
2 |
White
Stork |
|
|
|
Cinonia ciconia |
|
3 |
Eurasian
Spoonbill |
2 |
20 |
|
Platalea leucorodia |
|
3 |
Mute Swan
|
1 |
2 |
|
Cygnus
olor |
|
2 |
White-fronted
Goose |
|
|
|
Anser albifrons |
|
3 |
Lesser
White-fronted Goose |
3 |
54 |
|
Anser erythropus |
|
2 |
Taiga
Bean Goose |
1 |
2 |
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Anser (fabalis) fabalis |
|
1 |
Tundra
Bean Goose |
1 |
1 |
|
Anser (fabalis) rossicus |
|
3 |
Greylag
Goose |
4 |
000s |
|
Anser anser |
|
1 |
Barnacle
Goose |
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|
|
Branta leucopsis |
|
2 |
Common Shelduck |
1 |
1 |
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Tadorna tadorna |
|
3 |
Wigeon |
5 |
15 |
|
Anas penelope |
|
3 |
Gadwall |
4 |
300 |
|
Anas strepera |
|
3 |
Teal |
5 |
4000 |
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Anas crecca |
|
3 |
Mallard |
6 |
2000 |
|
Anas plathyrhynchos |
|
3 |
Pintail |
3 |
25 |
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Anas acuta |
|
2 |
Garganey |
3 |
4 |
|
Anas querquedula |
|
1 |
Blue
Winged Teal |
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|
|
Anas discors |
|
3 |
Shoveler |
5 |
200 |
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Anas clypeata |
|
3 |
Pochard |
2 |
120 |
|
Aythya farina |
|
3 |
Ferruginous
Duck |
1 |
10 |
|
Aythya nyroca |
|
3 |
Tufted
Duck |
2 |
7 |
|
Aythya fuligula |
|
2 |
White-tailed
Eagle |
2 |
5 |
|
Haliaeetus albicilla |
|
3 |
Marsh
Harrier |
6 |
8 |
|
Circus
aeruginosus |
|
3 |
Hen
Harrier |
2 |
2 |
|
Circus
cyaneus |
|
2 |
Pallid
Harrier |
1 |
1 |
|
Circus
macrourus |
|
3 |
Goshawk |
2 |
2 |
|
Accipiter
gentiles |
|
3 |
Sparrowhawk |
4 |
5 |
|
Accipiter
nisus |
|
3 |
Common
Buzzard |
9 |
40 |
|
Buteo buteo |
|
3 |
Long-legged
Buzzard |
1 |
1 |
|
Buteo rufinus |
|
1 |
Honey
Buzzard |
1 |
1 |
|
Pernis apivorus |
|
1 |
Spotted
Eagle |
|
|
|
|
|
3 |
Eastern
Imperial Eagle |
1 |
3 |
|
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|
2 |
Golden
Eagle |
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|
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|
|
1 |
Short-toed
Eagle |
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|
|
Circaetus gallieus |
|
3 |
Kestrel |
7 |
40 |
|
Falco tinnunculus |
|
2 |
Red-footed
Falcon |
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|
|
Falco vespertinus |
|
3 |
Hobby |
1 |
1 |
|
Falco subbuteo |
|
3 |
Saker |
2 |
2 |
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Falco cherrug |
|
2 |
Peregrine
Falcon |
1 |
1 |
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Falco peregrinus |
|
1 |
Merlin |
|
|
|
Falco columbarius |
|
1 |
Hazel
Grouse |
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|
|
Bonasa bonasia |
|
2 |
Capercaillie |
1 |
2 |
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Tetrao urogallus |
|
1 |
Grey
Partridge |
|
|
|
Perdis perdis |
|
3 |
Common
Pheasant |
6 |
6 |
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Phasianus colchicus |
|
3 |
Water
Rail |
2 |
1 |
H |
Rallus aquaticus |
|
1 |
Little Crake |
|
|
|
Porzana parva |
|
2 |
Common
Moorhen |
|
|
|
Gallinula chloropus |
|
3 |
Eurasian
Coot |
4 |
200 |
|
Fulica atra |
|
3 |
Common
Crane |
5 |
000's |
|
Grus grus |
|
3 |
Great
Bustard |
1 |
5 |
|
Otis tarda |
|
3 |
Pied
Avocet |
3 |
24 |
|
Recurvirostra avosetta |
|
3 |
Stone-curlew |
1 |
12 |
|
Burhinos oedinemus |
|
3 |
Little
Ringed Plover |
2 |
5 |
|
Charadrius dubius |
|
3 |
Ringed
Plover |
3 |
8 |
|
Charadrius hiaticula |
|
3 |
Grey
Plover |
1 |
1 |
|
Pluvialis squatarola |
|
3 |
Dotterel |
1 |
22 |
|
Eudromyas morinellus |
|
1 |
Golden
Plover |
|
|
|
Pluvialis apricaria |
|
3 |
Northern
Lapwing |
5 |
400 |
|
Vanellus vanellus |
|
1 |
Sanderling |
1 |
2 |
|
Calidris alba |
|
1 |
Ruddy
Turnstone |
1 |
1 |
|
Arenaria interpres |
|
3 |
Little
Stint |
3 |
12 |
|
Calidris minuta |
|
3 |
Dunlin |
3 |
80 |
|
Calidris alpine |
|
3 |
Ruff |
4 |
25 |
|
Philomachus pugnax |
|
1 |
Buff
Breasted Sandpiper |
|