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| Tumbes Reserved Zone |
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The Tumbes National Forest is the only protected
forest in the area that hosts all the threatened Tumbezian endemics.
Most of this habitat has been cleared and destroyed in Ecuador but
here the forest stretches for miles and Ocelots, and Mantled Howler
Monkeys live unmolested as do the threatened bird species. This is
a real wilderness experience with genuinely endangered species in
a beautiful setting. These birds are tough anywhere else and to be
found after much searching in heavily disturbed habitat ex cept for
within this exceptional reserve.
| Day 1 : |
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Arrive in Lima and transfer to our hotel in Lima. |
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| Day 2: |
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Morning flight to Tumbes. On arrival in Tumbes (just south of the Ecuadorian border) we’ll transfer to the comfortable Costa del Sol hotel and after an early lunch head out into the mangrove thickets in Tumbes Mangrove Reserved Zone. From a local boat we’ll enter narrow channels in search of Masked Water Tyrant, Rufous-necked Wood-Rail, Clapper Rail, White Ibis and Mangrove Warbler. We’ll see many shorebirds and inshore seabirds here as well and there is also a chance of two spécies of Whistling Duck. Herons include: Yellow-crowned and Black-crowned Night-Herons, Little-Blue, White-necked and Tricolored Heron, plus a recently discovered population of Bare-throated Tiger-Heron. Mangrove Black Hawk is also a possibility. In the late afternoon we’ll bird in the desert scrub along the road. Species we expect here include: Pacific Parrotlet, Scarlet-backed Woodpecker, Necklaced Spinetail, Superciliaried Wren, Collared Antshrike, Baird’s Flycatcher, Tawny-crowned Pygmy-tyrant, Pearl Kite, Tumbezian Tyrannulet Tumbes Sparrow and Cinereous Finch. Night at Hotel Costa del Sol. B:L:D
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| Day 3: |
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We’ll
get an early start to-day so as to be in prime habitat at
dawn. We drive east down rutted, dusty roads in four wheel
drive jeeps to El Mirador for a dawn breakfast as the birds
start to sing. We’ll walk a track with no traffic looking
for birds of the drier forest amidst some of the most fantastic
bombax forest on earth. Giant green barked, pot bellied trees
hanging with spanish moss provide a home for One-colored and
Slaty Becards, Tumbes Peewee, White-headed Brush-Finch, Plumbeous-backed
Thrush, Ecuadorian Ground Dove, Tumbes Swift, Saffron Siskin,
Red-masked Parakeet and many other commoner widely distributed
species. In the pm we’ll leave our vehicle and walk slowly
a two kilometer stretch of trail where we have had luck with
Black-capped Sparrow, Henna-hooded Foliage-gleaner and Scrub
Antpitta. We’ll arrive at Quebrada El Faical at dusk with
our safari camp already set up. B:L:D
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| Day 4 and 5: |
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Over
the next two days we’ll bird the area between Quebrada Faical
and Pozo del Pato and the slopes of Cerro San Miguel - the
highest, wettest and greenest part of Tumbes. Here in the
Tumbes Reserved Zone, mile upon mile of prime dry deciduous
forest stretches as far as the eye can see. The Ecuadorian
border is a stones throw away, but unfortunately on that side
of the border there is little, or no forest left. Here on
the Peruvian side, Ocellots and Mantled Howler Monkeys survive
unmolested, as does the very interesting Tumbesian avifauna.
Birds we hope to see over the next two days, and that we have
seen here in the past include : Pale-browed Tinamou, Gray-backed
Hawk, Black-hawk Eagle, Rufous-headed Chachalaca, Crested
Guan, Ochre-bellied Dove and Pallid Doves, Gray-cheeked Parakeet,
Bronze-winged Parrot, West Peruvian Screech-owl, Green-breasted
Mango, Ecuadorian Piculet, Red-rumped Woodpecker, Guayaquil
Woodpecker, Blackish-headed Spinetail, Slaty Spinetail, Henna-hooded
and Rufous-necked Foliage-gleaner, Chapman’s Antshrike, Gray-headed
Antbird, Scrub Antpitta, Pacific Elaenia, Rufous-winged Tyrranulet,
Ochraceous Attila, Pacific Royal Flycatcher, Black-tailed
Fycatcher, Ecuadorian Thrush, White-vented Plumleteer, Green-crowned
Woodnymph, Violet-bellied Hummingbird, Gray-breasted Flycatcher,
Pacific Fire-eye, Lesser Greenlet, Yellow-tailed and White-edged
Orioles. Nights in camp. B:L:D
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| Day 6: |
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bird the morning hours between our camp at Pozo el Pato and
Quebrada Faical where we’ll transfer to our jeeps and return
to the drier forest for the rest of the afternoon and after
lunch bird our way back to Tumbes thru drier deciduous forest,
looking especially for Saffron Siskin and Becards, planning
to arrive in Tumbes at dusk. Night at Hotel Costa del Sol.
B:L:D
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| Day 7: |
| Flight
from Tumbes to Lima (or drive to Chiclayo if taking the Maranon
North Peru tour) International flights home or overnight at
our hotel close to the airport or join our Iquitos tour. B:L:D
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Does not include air Lima – Tumbes - Lima but we will purchase these on request – the price depends on when we get your full name, deposit and passport numbers – you can check current prices at www.LAN.com |
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