Thailand, Hala Bala, September 2nd - 4th 2015

Published by Dominic Le Croissette (dominic.lecroissette AT gmail.com)

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Like most birders, I was unsure about whether to make the long journey to the Deep South, due to the ongoing civil war that has claimed more than 6,000 lives since 2004. The British government advises against all but essential travel to the area. Bombings and shootings occur on an almost daily basis, and while tourists are not targeted, the nature of the attacks is indiscriminate and it is possible to end up in the wrong place at the wrong time.

On the other hand, Hala Bala wildlife sanctuary is in a remote area, far from the towns and villages where the majority of the attacks take place. Birders regularly visit in small numbers, and even the occasional commercial birding tour goes there. The long bird list for the sanctuary – including many species found nowhere else in Thailand – is more than tempting.

After reading around as much as I could online – and keeping in mind that the latest news stories may not be reported in the English language media – I decided to chance a visit. My first strategy was to be prepared. Before heading south from Hat Yai, I stocked up on food and water – enough for my 2.5 day stay in the park - and filled the fuel tank of my rental car. I wanted to be able to drive straight to Hala Bala without stopping, and remain within the park boundaries for the duration of my stay.

Directions: Hala Bala is about 280km from Hat Yai, and is relatively easily reached along the main coastal highway through Songkhla, Pattani, and Narathiwat provinces, with a journey time of just under 4 hours. From eastern Songkhla onwards, the region is under martial law. Military checkpoints are frequent, and armored vehicles and machine-gun toting troops are much in evidence. This might be expected to produce a rather menacing atmosphere, but people seem to go about their lives as normal and I never felt in any danger – indeed, the constant presence of troops is actually somewhat reassuring. Of course, the soldiers always raised their eyebrows in surprise as I rolled down the window at the checkpoints, as I suppose very few foreign tourists make their way down here.

The sat nav in my rental car already had “Hala Bala peat swamp research center” programmed in to it, which is inside the sanctuary, so all I had to do was follow the directions. For those without sat nav, the route is easy as far as the border town of Sungai Kolok, from where you should follow road 4057 to Waeng. Even the sat nav was confused in Waeng, but the town is not that big and eventually you should find yourself on the 4057 heading out of town towards the Buketa border checkpoint. Just before the border is a right turn to a village, take this road which becomes the 4062 and heads through several small villages before entering the wildlife sanctuary. It is only for the last few kilometers that Hala Bala wildlife sanctuary is actually signposted.

Orientation: The park HQ is in the first group of buildings you come across, up a steep track on the right (signposted “office” from the main road).

The research center is a few kilometers further ahead, on the left. There is a big sign with a picture of Rhinoceros Hornbills on it, and an entry checkpoint. A few hundred meters further on along the 4062, there is a turning on the left for Sirindhorn Waterfall (it is signposted).
The 4062 then continues through the wildlife sanctuary for about 12km, crossing three bridges along the way, and climbing to a high point before descending to another checkpoint which marks the western end of the Bala reserve.

Shortly after the western checkpoint, a driveway on the left goes through gates to a forest temple with some trails that sometimes produce good birds. A kilometer or so further on, road 4062 enters a village (called Ban Phu Khao Thong), with an intersection next to a playing field. Keep going straight, and there is a general store that sells cold beer on the left (this road eventually ends at the Malaysian border complete with manned gun tower). Take the right turn at the intersection, follow the road around to the left, and continue straight ahead at the next intersection. There is a school on the left, and a noodle soup stand on the right, where I had lunch every day. Ban Phu Khao Thong is very friendly, and I was greeted with great interest by the locals. It is a Thai Buddhist village, hence the availability of beer and “kuaytiaw moo”. As a general rule, the villages to the west of the sanctuary (this one and Ban Toh Moh a little further on) appear to be Buddhist, and the ones to the east along the road to Waeng are all Muslim.

The Toh Moh community forest, mentioned in some site guides, is reached by continuing past the school/noodle soup shop for about 5km, as far as the T-junction in Ban Toh Moh. Turn left here and follow the road to the end, where the trail begins. This forest is outside the protected area of the wildlife sanctuary but still an excellent birding spot.

Accommodation and food: I turned up with no advance notice, fully prepared to sleep in the car if necessary. On arrival, I went to the office, where the park director and his staff were very friendly, although communication was difficult as they spoke hardly any English and my Thai is absolutely minimal. I was informed that the usual way to stay at Hala Bala is to send an email a month in advance to their head office in Bangkok. Having not done this, it seemed at first that my chances were low of getting a roof over my head for the night at the sanctuary. However, after a lot of smiling and a little gentle negotiation, I was given permission to stay in an empty building in the park HQ grounds, and provided with a sleeping mat, pillow, blankets and a fan, in exchange for a “donation” of 100 baht per night. It seemed to help my case when I made it clear that I was a birder and not a photographer, I guess they may have had issues in the past with photographers wishing to stake out rare species in the sanctuary.

One of the unexpected rules stipulated by the director was that I was to have a park ranger with me at all times while birding. I didn’t like this rule, but agreed to it anyway. I had two rangers with me throughout the first morning and into the early part of the afternoon, which wasn’t too much of a hardship as they had birding optics and a field guide with them, and they were friendly and interested in birds although not especially knowledgeable. By halfway through the first afternoon, they evidently decided I was OK on my own and left me to my own devices, and they didn’t accompany me again after that.

I had enough food with me to last for the duration of my stay (bread, canned fish, fruit, nuts etc.), but I supplemented my diet at lunchtime with noodle soup from the shop in Ban Phu Khao Thong, as already mentioned. There are also some food options in the Muslim villages to the east of the sanctuary.

Birding: I found some fairly good information online; the main sites I used were Thai Birding, Phuket Birdwatching, and South Thailand Birding. North Thailand birding also had some trip reports with species lists.

The roadside is the main site for birding. Road 4062 runs through the sanctuary from east to west. This road has almost no traffic apart from the occasional park ranger or local on a motorbike (I saw less than one vehicle an hour on average). It is a single track road for most of its length, with vegetation brushing both sides of the car at several points; there are however fairly frequent places to park on the verge. The road is generally in reasonable shape, and while there are one or two rough parts it should still be passable with care in a non-4x4 car.

The two viewpoints mentioned in Thai Birding’s site guide no longer exist, and getting views across the forest canopy is more or less impossible, making it presumably quite a bit trickier to see Hornbills than it used to be. The only place I had a good open view of the forest was along a short section a couple of kilometers west of the research center where the road is banked with concrete; there were almost no opportunities after this, which was particularly frustrating near the high point of the road where I heard Helmeted Hornbill daily but had almost no chance of seeing it.

Bird activity seemed especially high along the ridge just east of the highest point of the road, and on the downhill stretch west of there as far as the third bridge, even in the afternoons when bird waves were commonly encountered.

The high levels of action on the road contrasted with very quiet birding within the forest. I spent some time on the short nature trail in the lower section of the research center, where there were a fair amount of leeches and not a lot of birds. I didn’t wade across the river to the “long” leech trail, I will save this for another visit at a better time of year when forest birds are more active and vocal, and when I have a pair of leech socks with me!

The Toh Moh community forest offers a nice easy trail through good habitat, alongside a stream which should offer the chance of forest kingfishers. Birding was good during my visit here for the first couple of hours of daylight, before suddenly going quiet.

I went out a couple of times at night with my spotlight, just around the park HQ area, and heard no night birds whatsoever. I’m assuming that other times of year would be more productive for this, as Blyth’s/Javan Frogmouth is supposedly abundant in the area and many species of owl occur.

The weather wasn’t bad, with mostly dry and hot days, and some rain in the late afternoons and overnight. Mornings often started gloomy and misty, which hampered birding especially in the closed forest.

My overall feeling was that while the birding was very good, I felt the species diversity was a little lower than I had been expecting, and I couldn’t help but feel that I would have seen and heard more at a different time of the year. But for a first visit it was very good and I will definitely be coming back as soon as the opportunity allows.

Bird highlights by locality:

Park HQ: Apart from sleeping here, I spent very little time here but did see a Black-and-yellow Broadbill early one morning.

Research center (lower part): Crested Jay, Black-and-red Broadbill, Sultan Tit.

Sirinthorn Waterfall and road junction: Yellow-crowned Barbet, Scaly-breasted Bulbul, Chestnut-naped Forktail, Grey-headed Babbler, Black-bellied Malkoha.

Viewing area by concrete embankment: Great Hornbill, Rhinoceros Hornbill, Brown-backed Needletail.

Bridge 2: Blue-banded Kingfisher, Blue-crowned Hanging Parrot.

Forest along ridge near highest point of road: Crimson-winged Woodpecker, Checker-throated Woodpecker, Pale Blue Flycatcher, Everett’s White-eye.

Road from the highest point down to bridge 3: Chestnut-backed Scimitar-Babbler, Buff-rumped Woodpecker, Violet Cuckoo.

Temple trails: Short-tailed Babbler, Purple-naped Sunbird, Gold-whiskered Barbet.

Toh Moh community forest: Rufous-winged Philentoma, Scarlet-rumped Trogon, Buff-necked Woodpecker, Rufous Piculet, Black-capped Babbler, Scaly-crowned Babbler.

Species Lists

Full bird list (96 species seen in total, no heard-only birds included on list, and open country species seen outside sanctuary area not included):

1. Crested Serpent Eagle
2. Emerald Dove
3. Violet Cuckoo
4. Black-bellied Malkoha
5. Raffle’s Malkoha
6. Chestnut-breasted Malkoha
7. Greater Coucal
8. Silver-rumped Needletail
9. Brown-backed Needletail
10. Glossy Swiftlet
11. Germain’s Swiftlet
12. Grey-rumped Treeswift
13. Whiskered Treeswift
14. Great Hornbill
15. Rhinoceros Hornbill
16. Blue-banded Kingfisher
17. White-throated Kingfisher
18. Red-bearded Bee Eater
19. Chestnut-headed Bee Eater
20. Scarlet-rumped Trogon
21. Red-throated Barbet
22. Blue-eared Barbet
23. Gold-whiskered Barbet
24. Yellow-crowned Barbet
25. Crimson-winged Woodpecker
26. Checker-throated Woodpecker
27. Buff-rumped Woodpecker
28. Buff-necked Woodpecker
29. Rufous Piculet
30. Blue-crowned Hanging Parrot
31. Black-and-yellow Broadbill
32. Black-and-red Broadbill
33. Large Woodshrike
34. Bar-winged Flycatcher-shrike
35. Rufous-winged Philentoma
36. Green Iora
37. Great Iora
38. Scarlet Minivet
39. Lesser Cuckooshrike
40. White-bellied Erpornis
41. Dark-throated Oriole
42. Greater Racket-tailed Drongo
43. Black-naped Monarch
44. Crested Jay
45. Grey-headed Canary Flycatcher
46. Sultan Tit
47. Velvet-fronted Nuthatch
48. Black-headed Bulbul
49. Black-crested Bulbul
50. Scaly-breasted Bulbul
51. Stripe-throated Bulbul
52. Cream-vented Bulbul
53. Yellow-bellied Bulbul
54. Red-eyed Bulbul
55. Spectacled Bulbul
56. Hairy-backed Bulbul
57. Ochraceous Bulbul
58. Buff-vented Bulbul
59. Cinereous Bulbul
60. Yellow-bellied Warbler
61. Common Tailorbird
62. Dark-necked Tailorbird
63. Rufous-tailed Tailorbird
64. Rufescent Prinia
65. Yellow-bellied Prinia
66. Everett’s White-eye
67. Pin-striped Tit-Babbler
68. Chestnut-winged Babbler
69. Rufous-fronted Babbler
70. Chestnut-backed Scimitar-Babbler
71. Grey-headed Babbler
72. Moustached Babbler
73. Scaly-crowned Babbler
74. Puff-throated Babbler
75. Short-tailed Babbler
76. Black-capped Babbler
77. Brown Fulvetta
78. Asian Fairy Bluebird
79. Oriental Magpie Robin
80. Pale Blue Flycatcher
81. Verditer Flycatcher
82. Chestnut-naped Forktail
83. Greater Green Leafbird
84. Lesser Green Leafbird
85. Blue-winged Leafbird
86. Yellow-breasted Flowerpecker
87. Crimson-breasted Flowerpecker
88. Orange-bellied Flowerpecker
89. Ruby-cheeked Sunbird
90. Plain Sunbird
91. Brown-throated Sunbird
92. Purple-naped Sunbird
93. Little Spiderhunter
94. Grey-breasted Spiderhunter
95. Grey Wagtail
96. White-rumped Munia

Dominic Le Croissette 5/9/2015
http://domthebirder.com