22nd December 2024 – Akrotiri Peninsula, Cyprus

Our second day proper of the natural history trip was a very good one with lots of interesting birds and plants to see in a variety of venues on the Akrotiri Peninsula, about an hour’s drive to the east of Paphos.

We had mixed weather but managed to stay dry all day. However the light was not good and not very conducive for good photos or, indeed, any photos at all.

We started at the Zakaki bird hide which, although it had fabulous large posters of the birds to be seen, was poorly managed and we couldn’t see much through the giant reeds.

Not a lot to be seen from this hide

Locally we did have lots of sightings of marsh harriers and a kestrel and some of the group saw a male hen harrier. Despite my attempt to take plenty of photos, I achieved very little. When will I ever learn that tiny specks in my view finder will never produce decent photos?

We walked further along the road to a pool next to the sea where there were greater flamingos and lots of gulls (mainly black-headed but some slender-billed and one larger one which caused lots of discussion without a definitive id.).

Greater flamingos

Greater flamingos
Lots of discussion about this gull – Michael Sammut from Malta tells me it’s a sub-adult yellow-legged gull

We drove west along some mud flats (Lady’s Mile) but saw very little.

We crossed the estuary on the low tide in the coach and eventually arrived at a monastery (no one around – they must have all been in chapel) where we parked and walked to Bishop’s Pool. The walk here was very interesting with people spotting lots of butterflies, a hummingbird moth, carpenter bees and many interesting plants.

At the pool there were lots of ducks including shovelers, little grebes and, the best of the pick, a ferruginous duck.

Ferruginous duck

After lunch we moved on to a wetlands where there was plenty to see but impossible to photograph as it was into the poor light. The highlight here were spur winged plovers.

Spur-winged plover

Our last visit was to the Kensington Cliffs where we were treated to views of a long legged buzzard and a peregrine. We also looked more closely at a variety of the vegetation on the cliff tops.

Close up of a kestrel which spoiled my view of the ferruginous duck

Long-legged buzzard

Peregrine falcon

Favourite plant of the day – Friar’s cowl

A romantic moment for a couple on the edge of the cliffs – a first sighting for me of such a cultural event.

Comments

5 responses to “22nd December 2024 – Akrotiri Peninsula, Cyprus”

  1. Michael Sammut Avatar
    Michael Sammut

    This is a sub adult Yellow- legged Gull.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. martintayler Avatar

      I’m trying to edit it on my phone at the top of a mountain in the pouring rain in Cyprus. Wi-fi better here than many cities in UK!

      Martin Tayler Martin’s bird and nature blog: https://martinsbirdblog.com/

      Liked by 1 person

  2. Michael Sammut Avatar
    Michael Sammut

    You’re welcome.

    Like

  3. rogerrees2 Avatar
    rogerrees2

    Not a 3rd Winter Caspian Gull? Need Peter Grant’s definitive ID book on Gulls for this one.

    Like

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