Mallorca: Mediterranean magic

This tour will not run in 2011

Cost:

Single room supplement:

Please click here for details and an explanation of the price breakdown

Maximum group size: 7 with 1 leader; 14 with 2 leaders.

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The ornithological richness of a spring visit to Mallorca has made the island famous as one of Europe’s prime birdwatching destinations.  We’ll be based close to Puerto Pollensa, centrally located among the varied mountain, marsh and coastal habitats of the northern part of the island and well removed from the main tourist areas in the southwest.  Our itinerary is flexible, offering a choice of day-long birdwatching or a more leisurely pace for those who prefer it.  With little physical effort, we’ll be able to enjoy some of Europe’s most sought-after species amid beautiful, sometimes spectacular, scenery.  This gently-paced tour has a potential list of over 120 species and a major objective is for participants to get good views of all of them, as well as plenty of informal guidance on improving identification skills.

We have been runing tours to Mallorca since 1984 and we have chosen the dates to make the most of the spring migration as well as the weekends, giving us 7 full days on the island and a bit at either end. 

Day 1:  The tour begins in London with a flight to Palma followed by a one-hour drive to Cala San Vicene.  Night in Cala San Vicene.

Days 2-7:  With no hotel changes during our stay, the daily itinerary is both uncomplicated and flexible.  After breakfast we’ll leave to visit one or another of the island’s noted birdwatching localities and each day the leader will prepare a delicious picnic lunch of local delicacies. 

Each of the localities we’ll visit has it’s own special attractions.  S'Albufera is Mallorca’s largest marsh and has so far resisted all attempts to drain it; in 1985 it was declared a reserve, a tribute to the local and international conservationists who fought to save it.  Here, and at the smaller Albufereta marsh, we’ll seek a variety of wetland species and other birds, among them Little Egret, Purple and Night Herons, Little Bittern, Garganey, Osprey, and Great Reed and Moustached Warblers, with the possibility of rarities such as Squacco Heron, Marsh Sandpiper, Slender-billed Gull, and Red-throated Pipit.

In the island’s northern mountain range we’ll drive to the picturesque, peak-ringed Cuber Reservoir.  On another day the spectacular Formentor Peninsula will be our destinations.  In these largely montane habitats we hope to see Black Vulture at one of its few remaining European sites, and a variety of other birds such as Egyptian Vulture, Booted Eagle, Peregrine, the spectacular Eleonora’s Falcon (which usually begins to arrive in late April), Blue Rock Thrush, Tawny Pipit, Firecrest, and many Crossbills.

At Cap de Ses Salines, sea-watching should provide views of Balearic and Cory’s Shearwaters, and, gracefully patrolling the clifftops, several Audouin’s Gulls, the rarest breeding gull in Europe.  This is also one of the best areas to see Marmora’s Warbler, a delightful Mediterranean species of very limited distribution.

At the nearby saltpans of Salinas de Levante, the island’s main wader site, Kentish Plover and Black-winged Stilt occur regularly.  If weather conditions are right the saltpans can be thronged with waders of many species, and there is a chance of rarities such as Collared Pratincole, and Gull-billed and Whiskered Terns.  In stony fields in this part of the island we’ll look for Stone-curlew and the rare Thekla Lark. 

For many birdwatchers, Mallorca’s main appeal is the constant stream of migrant arrivals, which usually reaches its height in late April and early May.  Unexpected rarities can occur anywhere on the island, but particularly good are migrant ‘traps’ such as the fig orchards and fields at Casas Velles on the Formentor Peninsula, and the Bocquer Valley.

In all habitats we’ll hope for uncommon species; recent tours have produced Glossy Ibis, Black Kite, Red-footed Falcon, Pallid and Alpine Swifts, Bee-eater, Red-rumped Swallow, Black-eared Wheatear, Rock Thrush, Rufous Bush Robin, Subalpine and Western Bonelli’s Warblers, and Golden Oriole, as well as the local specialities mentioned above.  All of this, of course, in a context of regular Mediterranean birds such as Hoopoe, Wryneck, Short-toed Lark, Crag Martin, Cetti’s, Fan-tailed and Sardinian Warblers, Woodchat Shrike (of both the nominate and Balearic races), Serin, and Cirl Bunting.  Nights in Cala San Vicene.

Day 8:  After breakfast we’ll drive to Palma for our return flight to London where the trip concludes.

 

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

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Last updated June 2008