Austria:  birds and music


Wednesday 3 September to Sunday 14 September 2008

Wednesday 9 September to Sunday 20 September 2009
with Bryan Bland and Amanda Holden as leaders.

Cost: £2680 (2008)

Single room supplement: £180

Price includes good tickets for all concerts.

Maximum group size: 8 with 1 leader; 16 with 2 leaders.

The second named leader will only join the tour if there are more than 8 participants.

Bird List
Booking Form

'As we have been several times with Bryan, we always appreciate his knowledge on birds, music, history, and wildlife in general. The tour report is a wonderful souvenir - thanks.' J & J Miller 2006

This twelve-day extravaganza – with its many options in a full yet relaxed programme is ideal both for the ardent birder and music-lover and for anyone with a more casual attitude to leisure activity.  The holiday begins, before any musical counter-attractions, with two days devoted to birding.  Thereafter we’ll be caught up in the Eisenstadt International Haydn Festival – ‘tranquil, uncrowded, the sensible music-lover’s alternative to Salzburg’.  Our bird excursions to Seewinkle and its shorebird pools, the phragmites-fringed Lake Neusiedl (Europe's largest alkeline lake and the westernmost example of Eurasian steppe lakes), the limestone cliffs and coniferous forests of the Hohe Wand, the 6000-foot schneeberg ('King of the Northern Alps') and above all the bird-rich gardens of the Esterhazy Palace itself will be interspersed with the varied programme of magnificent concerts and associated musical events.

Eisenstadt is less than an hour by road from Vienna yet it still gives the impression of existing in another world, in another age.  It grew up in the shadow of the Esterházy Palace and until 1921 was part of Hungary.  From 1761 to 1790 this was Haydn’s base and his hectic life as court composer was spent commuting between the palace at Eisenstadt and its summer counterpart at Esterháza on the other side of Lake Neusiedl.

Over the years our birdwatching activities have become a well-known feature of the festival and Sunbird groups are now recognised and welcomed as old friends by everyone there.  Haydn wrote, ‘Eisenstadt... where I wish to live and to die’!  Without going quite that far, we can understand why successive Sunbird groups enjoy every moment of their stay and yearn to return for more. 

Days 1-3:  The tour begins with a flight from London to Vienna from where we’ll drive to our hotel at Eisenstadt, our home for the next eleven nights.  From here we'll spend the first few days exploring the surrounding countryside for birds. We’ll visit the Parndorfer Plain for Red-backed Shrike, Grey Partridge, and above all various raptors, hopefully including Hobby, Saker and Red-footed Falcon, and may be even Imperial Eagle.

A pre-breakfast visit to Jois or Brietenbrunn Marina could produce Spotted Crake, Bluethroat, Bearded and Penduline Tits and Moustached or Great Reed Warbler, and we'll spend a good part of one day exploring the Seewinkel pools for Spoonbill, Garganey, Little Stint, Wood and Curlew Sandpipers, and Kentish Plover, and searching the Hansag Plain for Great Bustard.  Another day will take us to Marchegg Forest or Hohenau near the Czech and Slovakian borders where we should find Black Stork, Collared Flycatcher and a host of woodland birds.  We'll return to Eisenstad during one afternoon in good time to relax and readjust for our first concert in the magnificent Haydnsaal, which claims to have the best accoustics in Central Europe.  Nights in Eisenstadt.

Most orchestral concerts at the Haydn festival take place in the beautifully painted Haydnsaal, which is just as Haydn left it 200 years ago.

Day 4:  Eisenstadt is a very special place and the whole ambience provides the perfect setting for a festival.  And of course the actual venues – the very palaces, churches, chapels, and salons for which Haydn wrote his music – could not be bettered. Similarly, our birding locations are scenically impressive and varied.  The concerts are of course fixed (notwithstanding any last-minute changes) but where we go each day will depend on the weather.  Even so, September days in the Burgenland are usually sunny and calm.  So there is a good chance that we shall be able to spend this day up the Hohe Wand, looking for Nutcracker, Goshawk, Crested Tit, Rock Bunting, and Firecrest and a selection of other passerines in the higher-altitude pine forests.  After a hearty lunch and some more birding we’ll return to our hotel in good time to shower, relax, perhaps have a swim and a sauna, and attend the evening concert.  Light supper at our hotel.

Day 5:  After a pre-breakfast option on the orangery terrace (where we usually see six species of woodpecker) our day will continue with a thrilling performance of a Mass in full liturgical setting in the Bergkirche, the church where Haydn is buried.  We shall then spend more time in the palace park, a masterpiece of English landscape gardening, interrupting our birding activities to attend the relaxed windband recital at the Leopoldinen Temple.  There’ll also be plenty of free time for resting, swimming, and personal exploration.  If we have had only a picnic lunch we shall have dinner early.

Day 6:  After more optional pre-breakfast birding in the palace park (targeting maybe Short-toed Treecreeper, Hawfinch, and Long-tailed Tit) we’ll spend the morning at the amazing Forchtenstein castle and add more birds – maybe Mistle Thrush, Spotted Flycatcher, and Lesser Spotted Woodpecker – to our list around the Rosalia chapel in the wooded hills above.  An excellent restaurant there will provide us with a filling lunch.  Then there’ll be an opportunity for more birding (or free time in Eisenstadt) in the afternoon.  Light supper at our hotel.

Day 7:  Today we’ll devote to Hungary, visiting Prince Esterhazy’s summer palace at Fertod, the Hungarian Versailles (and maybe attending a private concert in the very room where Haydn first performed his Farewell Symphony) as well as the bird reserves at Fertöújlak, Hidlmajor, and Nyirkai-Kishás, where in past years we have seen Crested Lark, Kingfisher, Purple Heron, Curlew Sandpiper, Little Stint, Black-winged Stilt, Black-necked Grebe, and – most unexpectedly – Little Bittern and Imperial and Steppe Eagles.  We'll also be able to sample Hungarian cuisine.

Day 8: Pre-breakfast birding could take us to Mörbisch marina pools (which in the past have produced Water Rail, Spotted Redshank, and Purple Heron and splendid views of Bearded and Penduline Tits) and a relaxed day around Eisenstadt could include visits to Haydn’s house (and maybe the palace and the Jewish museum) as well as lunch in Rust (where in recent years one or two White Storks have still lingered on their roof-top nests) and more birding around the lake or across the Hungarian border again at Fertörákos.  Light supper at the hotel.

Day 9:  Today we’ll explore more of the Seewinkel pools (looking for various waders, Spoonbill, Ferruginous Duck, Red-crested Pochard, and White-tailed Eagle), enjoy a wine-tasting and a fine lunch at Illmitz, another chance for the Great Bustards at Tadten or raptor-searching on the Parndorfer plain, and the opportunity to spend more time along the moving Road of Remembrance leading to the Bridge at Andau (q.v. the book by James Michener).  Or we might return to Eisenstadt in time to patronize one of its fine restaurants not visited so far.

Day 10: Weather permitting, after a 7am breakfast we’ll depart early for Puchberg and take the rack-and-pinion railway to the summit of Schneeberg for some alpine birding at over 6000 feet.  Hopefully we should see Alpine Chough, Water Pipit, Dunnock (which like the other accentors is truly a mountain species here), Redpoll, and Raven – but above all it is the views and the feeling of being on top of the world which should take our breath away.  The mountain air should give us a healthy appetite, so we’ll have lunch at the Berghaus Hochschneeberg with a lively gypsy cymbalon and violin accompaniment, then return to Eisenstadt in time to rest, shop, shower, or continue birding around the Gloriette and the woods above the park.  Light supper at the hotel.

Day 11:  Where we spend our last full day will depend on our priorities and any species missed so far. But the vote in 2003, 2004 and 2006 was for Molz and more wooded hillsides (at 4800 feet) with the chance of Black Grouse, Nutcracker, Crossbill, Meadow and Tree Pipits, Crested and Willow Tits, Firecrest and Goldcrest, and Grey Wagtail.  As usual we’ll return to Eisenstadt to allow for the usual options before our evening in the Haydnsaal.  Assuming we enjoyed a substantial lunch we’ll end the day with a light supper at the hotel.

Day 12:  Another Sunday, another joyous mass in full liturgical setting – this time in the cathedral.  Then a short walk (no doubt processing with Prince Anton and Princess Ursula and the Esterhazy Guard) to the palace for our final concert: Adam Fischer and the Austro-Hungarian Haydn Orchestra with the last movement of the Farewell as the now-traditional encore bringing this happiest and most inspiring of festivals to a close. If we don’t linger too long over our final lunch we shall have time to visit Haydn’s birthplace at Rohrau and continue via the Roman amphitheatres at Carnuntum (though the lions are now very small) to Vienna airport and our flight back to London, where the tour concludes.

More information about the festival can be found on http://www.haydnfestival.at and the Adam Fischer & Haydn Orchestra Fan Club website is http://www.serve.com/Haydn/

The Schneeberg offers clear mountain air and a chance for Alpine Choughs, Water Pipits, and Dunnocks.

 

E-mail or phone +44 (0)1767 262522 for availability.

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Last updated June 2008.


We begin our birding around Lake Neusiedl am See, where Bearded Tits are common. 


The Hohe Wand provides higher altitude species such as...


Crested Tit


and Nutcracker.


We usually see Alpine Chough on the summit of the Schneeberg.

Recitals of chamber works are usually in the smaller Empiresaal: here the Sunbird group share the front row with Prince Anton Esterházy, current head of the family who employed Haydn for over 30 years.

At the Esterházy summer palace, the Budapest Baryton Trio delight us with a private concert in the very room where Haydn first conducted his Farewell Symphony.


Most of our concerts in Eisenstadt take place in the Esterházy Palace.


The friendly ambience of this delightful festival, and the fact that Sunbird groups have been welcomed since its inception, means that there are plenty of...


...opportunities to discuss the music with the performers - such as this lunch session with the celebrated conductor Adam Fischer.


The picturesque town of Rust is famous for its roof-nesting White Storks.


In recent years one has lingered into mid-September to watch over us whilst we ate our al-fresco lunch in the town square.


Searching for Great Bustard on the Tadten plain takes us along the Road of Remembrance to the Bridge of Andau where numerous sculptures form a poignant reminder of life behind the Iron Curtain and escape to freedom.


Photos by Bryan Bland and June Persson