Sardinia, 1st - 4th December 2006

Published by Mark Hows (mark AT hows.org.uk)

Participants: Mark Hows

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Photos with this report (click to enlarge)

Spotless Starling
Spotless Starling

Please visit my website for further photos from this trip at http://www.hows.org.uk/inter/birds/sard/sardnia.htm

General Information

Well due to my company not giving me enough holiday, or was that I used it all birdwatching in ! A short pre Christmas tourist break mainly for sightseeing and socialising with a little birding squeezed in. We travelled from Stansted to Alghero with Ryan air (very cheap) and hired a car from Hertz, which although the booking suggested that CDW was included it was not. We stayed in the nice Hotel catalunya which very comfortable. The prices of everything apart from petrol was cheaper than the UK. Food and drink was excellent and we indulged. The weather was excellent hot and sunny, although a little chilly at night, we sat out drinking until about 9pm before going inside. Birding - well only 3 targets and just a little general birding while travelling the tourist sites.

Daily Guide

Friday 1st December.


We arrived without problem; and settled into the hotel before walking round the old city walls, so of which are coastal. Hooded crows and collared doves were common. Grey wagtail and cormorants were on the shore, and one was watched fishing underwater. A lesser whitethroat was found in a bush but there was little else apart from yellow legged gulls, seen during our tour of the town and bars.

Saturday 2nd December.

A reasonable start considering our late night drinking. We headed to Capo Caccia in search for my first target, Barbary partridge. No sign in a brief search. We headed for our first touristy visit, Neptunes Grotto. The cave system was excellent, and had a few rock doves nesting in them. The cliffs around held lots of gulls and a peregrine falcon along with loads of crag martins. Several Sardinian warblers made lots of noise but did not show and a couple of wrens were more co-operative. The next stop was the snack bar just down from the caves. Here both sardinian warblers and my second target Marmora’s warblers showed themselves by the car. The views only brief. The surrounding scrub held a couple of Marmora’s and they did show a little better. Wall lizards and locusts were seen along with loads of butterflies, some commonly recognised ones and some not identified. The second Touristy stop was Nurage Palmavera, an ancient settlement, which had some wildlife, lots of wall lizards and butterflies, and a couple of black redstarts.Porto Conte was the next stop to see the lighthouse, which again had black redstarts and loads of cats. A couple of shags and fantastic views. Fertilia was the late lunch stop, with both black redstarts, common redstarts and white wagtails in the car park / sculpture park area. A stop along the road produced a black kite, kestrel, peregrine, raven and buzzard in a thermal.We headed to Capo Falcone, the northwest tip of Sardinia, stopping at lots of places along the way for views and birds. There were lots of kestrels including a unseasonal lesser kestrel, and several buzzards. Little egrets and black winged stilts, meadow pipits, robin, stonechats, chiff chaff, great tit, blue tit, long tailed tit, common starling, and Spanish sparrow. On arrival at Stintino we headed to the furthest point to view the islands, here a barbary partridge ran out onto the road and joined two others on the verge, they flushed by my window winding down. We had a look round and headed back to Alghero for a night of over indulgence.

Sunday 3rd December.

Again a reasonable start due to the night before as we headed south along the coast on road 49. We stopped lots along the way for serin, stonechats and our third target, Corsican citril finch. We also had good views of a golden eagle and between km marker 7 and 8 we found the griffon roost with at least 15 birds thermalling with ravens. From here we headed south past Bosa to Cabras. In Bosa we had lots of spotless starlings. At Cabras there are large freshwater lakes and salt lagoons. The first stop was a reserve Pauli’s Sali. It was difficult to find and poorly signed. And there was not much here, the hide was in poor repair and overgrown with reeds. There were lots of black necked grebes, pochard and a couple of hundred greater flamingo’s. A few marsh harriers quartered over the marsh and we drove around the tracks, which a 4x4 is recommended in the wet but my fiat Panda did manage as rain had been in short supply. Great white egrets, spotless starlings and skylarks were abundant and a kingfisher a welcome sight. We then headed to Cabras for a late lunch. Our next stop was Tharros a Phonecian ruined city, built in 8th century BC – now that’s old. We stopped for thousands of flamingos in the lagoons on the way. In the ruins we had loads of Italian sparrows, black redstarts and Sardinian warblers. The journey back to Alghero was uneventful, where we over indulged on food and drink again.

Monday 4th December.

Not much but a few cattle egrets, before heading home.

Literature.

Directions and more info on the birding sites can be found in the following books.
A Birdwatchers'guide to Italy – Luciano Ruggieri and Igor Festari, ISBN 84-87334-86-5 – This book is quite up to date and most things are correct.

Michelin Map Sardegna, Italy regional 566, ISBN 2-06-100871-2.
For the tourist things we used the Eyewitness Guide to Sardinia. ISBN 1-40531-203-3.

Birds - 57 Species

Little Grebe
Black-necked Grebe
Shag (desmarestii)
Cormorant
Cattle Egret
Little Egret
Great White Egret
Grey Heron
Greater Flamingo
Mallard
Pochard
Griffon Vulture
Golden Eagle
Black Kite
Marsh Harrier
Common Buzzard (arrigonii)
Kestrel
Lesser Kestrel
Peregrine Falcon
Barbary Partridge
Moorhen
Coot
Black-winged Stilt
Yellow-legged Gull
Rock Dove
Collared Dove
Kingfisher
Skylark
Crag Martin
White Wagtail
Grey Wagtail
Wren (koenigi)
Robin
Redstart
Black Redstart
Stonechat
Blackbird
Lesser Whitethroat
Marmora’s Warbler
Sardinian Warbler
Zitting Cisticola
Reed Warbler
Iberian Chiffchaff
Great Tit (ecki)
Blue Tit
Long Tailed Tit (irbii)
Magpie
Hooded Crow (sardonicus)
Raven
Starling
Spotless Starling
Spanish Sparrow
Italian Sparrow
Linnet
Goldfinch (tchusii)
Serin
Corsican Citril Finch

Misc Animals -9 Species

Locust
Wall Lizard
Clouded Yellow
Red Admiral
Southern Orange Tip
Red Admiral
Painted Lady
Large White

If you want any other information please contact me mark@hows@org.uk