Tuesday 14 March 2023

 A fairly quiet 6 weeks.

In my last post we had just sent Liz and Sophie off to Zanzibar after 10 days with us in Arusha and on safari.  Immediately Jenny and I came down with cold symptoms that laid us out for a few days (longer for me of course).  The annoying cough made us wonder if we had finally caught COVID.  We didn’t lose our sense of smell and didn’t get tested.  Interestingly, neither the girls nor our guide Stanley reported any symptoms.


I was not feeling up to much birding away from home for a month but finally managed to get out to Eluanata Dam about an hour’s drive west of Arusha.  I went with my friends Abdul and Collins.  This wetland was originally a swamp that has been expanded with a dam.  It is an Important Bird Area (IBA) but receives little attention except from the occasional birder.

(See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Important_Bird_Area for a discussion of IBAs).



Abdul (left) and Collins


I have visited before and it holds a good variety of waterbirds - Great Crested Grebes notably.  It dried up in 2021-22 but is now holding water again.  There is little emergent vegetation and the food chain will take years to build back up to support a wide variety of ducks, geese, storks, herons, terns, gulls etc.  We saw a few Egyptian Geese and Blue-billed Teal and a lone Spoonbill on this visit.  The surrounding dry bush holds many birds however and we enjoyed a variety coming down to drink.  The whole area is grazed by cattle and goats of course and they all come down to drink as well - damaging the edge vegetation.  All up we saw 75 or so species of birds on a very hot day with highlights such as Horus Swift, Common Ringed Plover, Temminck’s Courser, Verreaux’s Eagle-owl, Red-fronted Barbet, Lesser Honeyguide, Red-backed Shrike, Northern Pied Babbler, Common Rock Thrush, Northern Wheatear, Southern Red Bishop and Cut-throat Finch.



Southern Red Bishop



Kenya Sparrow


Red-backed Shrike

One of Jenny’s workmates - Daniel, a young pilot from Costa Rica (via Alaska) - has just left and we broke our ‘no driving at night’ rule to have a nice evening send-off for him at the Olkokola Mission.  Driving home was just as awful as I thought it would be with nearly invisible pedestrians, vehicles of all sorts with minimal lights or overly bright lights (an unlit safari car suddenly appearing out of the gloom was particularly scary) and weak or non-existent street lighting.  But we made it!


Last weekend, Jenny and I had two nights in Tarangire National Park (two hours sw of Arusha).  We stayed at the Safari Lodge and this is one of our top favourites in all our travels.  It has great tent rooms, an excellent dining room, food, swimming pool, staff etc.  For me though the highlight is the view.  We went through a big list of lodges one night over dinner and couldn’t think of a lodge with a better view.  You take a chair, grab some complimentary snacks, order a beer or a vodka tonic and sit and watch the late afternoon evolve over the Tarangire River valley.  Elephants, giraffes, zebra, baboons, impala etc all come down for a drink.  Vultures and other raptors soar overhead while bush birds and mammals such as Dik-diks and Jackals appear in the bush below the viewing platform.  You chat to other visitors from all over the world or listen to their (often entertaining) conversations.  Each night we were there this visit we were serenaded by Lions in the wee hours.





The beer o'clock view from the Safari Lodge



Tracks left by elephants and a rather large python.


Von der Decken's Hornbill using the lodges spotting scope.


The park itself is huge and we have only ever been as far as half-way from north to south.  At the half-way point is Silale Swamp which is often full of Elephants and Buffalo as well as many waterbirds species.  We attempted to get to the swamp on this visit but turned around at a long stretch of road covered by water.  Never mind - we spent two days exploring the northern third of the park with little repetition.  The best areas were the grasslands of the Small Serengeti and the tracks that follow the Tarangire River southwards.  In the grassland we found many Ostrich, Bustards, Cuckoos, Lapwings, Raptors, Rollers etc but few mammals.  Along the river we were often surrounded by Elephants heading to drink (a few interesting moments here when we had to wait for them to decide to ignore us).  Here we also followed a couple of safari cars to a pride of lions resting up in a big riverside tree.



Our first sighting of lions in trees.


Lappet-faced Vulture at a waterhole.


Nile Monitor




Common Greenshank




Long-tailed Fiscal


A thunderstorm on Friday evening thankfully meant no dust for the rest of our stay but it seemed to stir up the tsetse flies and in some places they were very unpleasant.  You tell yourself - if it wasn’t for tsetse flies many East African national Parks wouldn’t exist - but it really doesn’t help when you have a dozen in the car with you and more trying to get in all the time.  Stopping for a small bird (or a pee) is particularly fraught.



Rufous-naped Lark

Bateleur

Northern Red-billed Hornbill

Wattled Starling

Lesser Grey Shrike

All up we saw 130 bird species in the two days - quite amazing with no swamp visit this trip.  We also saw the usual assortment of mammals plus a few gazelle, ground squirrels, mongoose, an eland and some hartebeest.  The zebra and giraffe all had many babies.  A small rat was photographed but is yet to be identified.


Crested Francolin

Greater Painted-snipe

Giraffe

Great Spotted Cuckoo

Unidentified rodent.

Another recent highlight was a visit from Lala Keunkel.  Lala was the partner of Paul Oliver who owned our compound in Arusha and who died 15 months ago.  She was here to sort out Paul's business affairs and to catch up with many old friends over many years living in Tanzania.  Lala stayed with us in the compound and we got to hear many stories about her life here - some funny, some sad but all fascinating. 

A rare event when all the compound residents were home at the same time.  
From left: Jenny, me, Lala, Krissie, Andrea.  Photo by Michele Menegon.


Back at home again, the long wet season is yet to commence.  It is very dry here after a failed short wet season.  As I write a water truck is in the laneway filling up the tanks for our apartment.  There isn’t enough water in other tanks to move into ours I guess.  Hopefully we will get some rain soon and fill them all.  Our neighbours to the north (Kenya, South Sudan etc) are much worse off than Tanzania and many people are struggling to feed themselves and wildlife is dying in national parks.  Civil strife is a real possibility.


Now we have 4 weeks left until we leave.  From here we will fly to the UK and have a six-week holiday, spending most of our time in Wales and Scotland.  It will be a dramatic contrast to life in Arusha I suspect.  Buying some warm clothes is my first priority.