Antshrike, Antbird, Thrush and Woodpeckers in Nicaragua

Maybe a strange combo for one post, but they do all eat bugs!  🙂

Barred Antshrike, Montibelli Nature Reserve, Nicaragua
Dusky Antbird, Montibelli Nature Reserve, Nicaragua
Wood Thrush, El Jaguar Nature Reserve, Nicaragua
Hoffman’s Woodpecker Montibelli Nature Reserve, Nicaragua
Golden-olive Woodpecker
Selva Negra Mountain Resort, Nicaragua

My 8 Tanagers in Nicaragua

Of course there are many more tanagers in Nicaragua, but this is what I photographed:

Golden-hooded Tanager, El Jaguar Nature Reserve, Nicaragua
Note in next photo how different the same bird can look!
Golden-hooded Tanager, Selva Negra Mountain Resort, Nicaragua
I know it looks a little different, but is the same species as above.
Crimson-collared Tanager, El Jaguar Nature Reserve, Nicaragua
Yellow-winged Tanager, Selva Negra Mountain Resort, Nicaragua
Summer Tanager, Montibelli Nature Reserve, Nicaragua
Yellow-crowned Euphonia, Selva Negra Mountain Resort, Nicaragua
Passerini’s Tanager, El Jaguar Nature Reserve, Nicaragua
Gray-headed Tanager, El Jaguar Nature Reserve, Nicaragua
Blue-gray Tanager, El Jaguar Nature Reserve, Nicaragua

Sorry for a repeat of the Crimson-collared Tanager, but this tanager collection wouldn’t be complete without it and it is my favorite shot of the whole trip as stated earlier! And apologies for some pretty poor photos here, but my bird collection is primary over photo quality.  🙂

I am really pleased with this collection of 8 different species of tanagers in Nicaragua since I only have 3 species in my Costa Rica Birds collection! Soon there will be a separate photo gallery of my Nicaragua birds and I’ll eventually do the same for Panama, Guatemala and Mexico.  A Central America collection!  🙂
Read About Tanagers on Wikipedia where you will learn it is the largest family of neotropical birds with about 240 or 12% of all our birds down here! Many are very colorful!

Two Toucans & Two Great Guides in Nicaragua

Keel-billed Toucan, near dining room, El Jaguar Reserve, Nicaragua
Collared Aracari Toucan, in tree by coffee field, El Jaguar Reserve, Nicaragua

 Obviously not my best toucan photos, so see other’s I’ve made in my Costa Rica Toucans Photo Gallery. But note that toucans are very difficult to photograph without expensive and large telephoto lens, since these birds generally stay high in the forest canopy. I did not get the lucky close one this trip like I did at Tortuguero. I was close to that Aracari!

See some interesting TOUCAN FACTS  on the “Interesting Animal Facts” Page.

And though I had other short-term guides, these two guys did two and three full days respectively with me and were both so very friendly, helpful and knowledgeable about the local birds. I could not have asked for better guides at either Montibelli or El Jaguar! They are my favorite on this trip! I will ask for both of them if I ever return!

Here I am with Luis at Chocoyero, our one trip out of Montibelli.
He was my full-time private guide at Montibelli Reserve and
very professional for a 21 year old! And spoke good Ingles!  🙂

And here is Moises at El Jaguar Reserve equally professional, 
knowledgeable and muy amable (friendly, helpful) 28 year old
He’s showing me a bird photo on phone for identification of one seen.
His whole family works for El Jaguar, mostly on the coffee farm.
AND I HAD MOISES LEADING ME THROUGH THE WILDERNESS!
🙂

Like most young people in Latin America, these guys treated me with ultimate respect because of my age. And they acted like it was a privilege to serve me anyway they could. Like all over the world, young men in their 20’s find it difficult to get jobs. These two are following their passion for birds with part-time work as guides. And as all young adults in both Costa Rica and Nicaragua, they live at home with their parents until married or a job in another place. Luis finishes university in June with a business degree but does not know what he will do. He would like to start a bird guide business, but the competition and seasonal nature of the work would make it difficult to support a family if he marries his girlfriend or novia. Moises is more likely to stay with El Jaguar doing multiple jobs beyond bird guiding. (His bosses know what a good guide he is!) For example, he works with an international organization banding birds two mornings a week and assisting with research (though it could be volunteer work). And of course there is the coffee farm work year around. He did not go to the university. He also drives the farm truck and here there are limited people who can or will drive, making them professional drivers or conductors.  There is more poverty in Nicaragua than Costa Rica and it is more difficult to find jobs, thus many from Nicaragua migrate to Costa Rica for work, like my maid Mayra and her husband and two children.

Both of these young men spoke good English but were just about the only ones in Nicaragua! I got lots of practice with my simple efforts to speak Spanish. ¡Necesito practicar más español!

I also had the good fortune of meeting and having dinner with the owners of El Jaguar one night. A Swiss man named George Duriaux married to a Nica woman, Liliana Chavarria-Duriaux, who inherited the land from her father and with George has turned it into a combination wildlife reserve and coffee farm, with coffee paying the bills! They are delightful people and she is one of the three co-authors of my new book, A Guide to the Birds of Nicaragua. She even autographed my copy with a nice personal note! She also gave suggestions to help me learn Spanish including the recommendation of two novels in español that she believes will help me learn the language faster. (If interested, they are Cien años de soledad and El amor en los tiempos del colera, both by Nobel prize writer Gabriel Garcia Marquez). I found both at Walmart yesterday and will try! ¡Muy dificil para me!  🙂  And I’m not sure if I’m ready to do Spanish on my Kindle yet. I may try one.

Both reserves were wonderful with El Jaguar standing out for me on this trip, partly for the extra day, the most birds, and meeting delightful people! As I left, two couples had checked in for their birding adventures there! One from Germany and the other from Canada. Meeting people like this is part of the joy of traveling!

And oh yes, there are more bird photos to share! I photographed around 70 species in Nicaragua! While continuing to share Nica photos, I go back to the many birds in Costa Rica yet to be photographed! But the need for a renewed visa gave me an excuse for the wonderful experience of traveling in another country! I loved every minute of it while still being glad to get home!

“To awaken quite alone in a strange town is one of the pleasantest sensations in the world.” 
– Freya Stark

3 Trogons in Nicaragua

Black-headed Trogon, Montibelli Reserve, Nicaragua
This one is very common in Montibelli and we saw many!
Elegant Trogon, Montibelli Reserve, Nicaragua

Gartered Trogon, Selva Negra Reserve, Nicaragua

Trogons are one of if not my favorite group of birds and my living room here has one wall of my bird photos, most being trogons. The rare Resplendent Quetzal is actually a Trogon, just the most colorful and different of them all. My collection is growing! 🙂

For those interested in the bird locations, it was a little surprising that we did not see a trogon in El Jaguar though I probably shot more total birds there. It is higher in the mountains and in theory could have a quetzal and other trogons, but we saw none there. 
In my Costa Rica Birds photo gallery I have only 3 Trogons plus the Resplendent Quetzal photos, which really makes it 4. And on my 2013-14 holidays tour of Panama I saw 4 Trogons but no quetzal, and we were still calling the gartered violaceous at that time. And here I’ve added 3 in Nicaragua. All total counting the Quetzal, I’ve photographed 9 different species of trogons in Central America and did not see any when in the Brazilian Amazon. 
See Wikipedia on Trogons where they say there are 39 species around the world with the most being in the neotropics (24) and 12 of those in Asia. The Costa Rica bird book lists 9 and Nicaragua’s 7. 

Last Night in Nicaragua – Tired & Just One Photo

I’m exhausted from 6 days in the jungle with no internet or much electricity, seeing and photographing more birds than I expected for an absolutely wonderful week! I’m in Managua tonight (Tuesday) and fly back to San Jose in the morning. Expect a lot of Nicaragua photos during the next couple of weeks! 🙂

Crimson-collared Tanager, El Jaguar Reserva, Nicaragua  (Standing on a coffee plant!)

This is my favorite shot of the whole 8 days in Nicaragua and totally untouched or cropped! Straight out of the camera. As we walked along one side of a coffee field we stopped to see a smaller bird across the way in a tree. This guy flew down and landed about 7 feet from me on this coffee plant. A true blessing! And I’ve now fallen in love with another Central American country!  🙂

J.M. Barrie

“The reason birds can fly and we can’t is simply because they have perfect faith, for to have faith is to have wings.”
― J.M. BarrieThe Little White Bird

Too Much Seen to Report it All!

Today’s Volcano Mombucho has many more photos but I’m settling for the orchid growing near the top! Yesterday’s boating trip had about 20 different species of birds photographed and I’m settling on just the Limpkin, my first to see or photograph in the wild! Plus one of the monkeys we saw on an island. And at dinner tonight more Holy Week pageantry. Tomorrow after breakfast I leave on my birding tour, so in the rainforests the next 6 days. And MAY NOT HAVE INTERNET MUCH OF THE NEXT WEEK.

Orchid growing wild on Volcan Mombucho
Limpkin camouflaged in tree on Lake Nicaragua
Monkey eating apple on an island in Lake Nicaragua
Tonight’s Semana Santa pageantry in addition to a carnival at the church.
Again with the large volunteer brass band playing and parading with the above through streets.

It’s an awesome place!
Nicaragua!

Nuestras experiencias más encantadoras son las más breves; es mejor que no sean comunes . . .

Nature Air Travel to Nicaragua

View of Cathedral from Iglesia La Merced bell tower across from my hotel
I immediately got into the colonial beauty of this old town.
My Nature Air plane for 11 of us from San Jose to Managua
Views from a small plane are spectacular! Farms, mountains and Lake Nicaragua.

First Night in Granada is Memorable!

La Merced Church is across the street from my Hotel La Merced and I watched this during my open air dinner,
Semana Santa (Holy Week) has pageantry several days and I’m thankful to begin my tour of Nicaragua with this!

From Wikipedia

A common feature in Spain is the almost general usage of the nazareno or penitential robe for some of the participants in the processions. This garment consists in a tunic, a hood with conical tip (capirote) used to conceal the face of the wearer, and sometimes a cloak. The exact colors and forms of these robes depend on the particular procession. The robes were widely used in the medieval period for penitents, who could demonstrate their penance while still masking their identity. These nazarenos carry processional candles or rough-hewn wooden crosses, may walk the city streets barefoot, and, in some places may carry shackles and chains on their feet as penance. In some areas, sections of the participants wear dress freely inspired by the uniforms of the Roman Legion.[1]

I will share more about the trip and other activities tomorrow.