9th April 2025 – Fuzeta, The Algarve, Portugal

After a few glorious weeks of wall to wall blue skies (but with fresh winds) in England we have arrived in the eastern end of the Algarve in Portugal where it is much warmer but the skies are a little greyish and the forecast is unsettled.

From a birding perspective it was very exciting yesterday evening to sit having our first beer on the front at Olhão (where we are staying) and to see a 100 plus swifts soaring overhead. Their screeching was quite a din but it made us feel that summer had arrived.

Today we took a taxi to the birding area of the Salinas da Fuzeta, a complex of salt pans just north of the town of Fuzeta, to the east of Olhão. The salt pans are part of the Parque Natural Ria Formosa.

It was quite an exciting start as the first bird we saw was a bee-eater; a beautiful bird that we have only seen on a few occasions.

Bee-eater

Not one but two!

Along the salt pans there were plenty of waders but no greater flamingos which we had hoped to see here.

Kentish plover and a sanderling

Common ringed plover

Common greenshank

Little stint

Pied avocet

A mixture of waders for the experts to identify

Black-winged stilts

A distant Caspian tern

Avocets doing what they do at this time of the year

Kentish plover

A western yellow wagtail

The flora around here was also very attractive.

As we walked into town there were hirondines everywhere.

A house Martin building a nest in a street lamp

After a wonderful seafood lunch on the front at À do Rui (a top recommendation from a friend) we had little appetite for any more birdwatching and all we saw was a common sandpiper on the shores of the Ria Formosa.

A common sand piper on the shores of the Ria Formosa

The lifeboat station at Fuzeta

Comments

2 responses to “9th April 2025 – Fuzeta, The Algarve, Portugal”

  1. robbiesinspiration Avatar

    These are great photographs, Martin. We get bee eaters here in South Africa. I was fortunate enough to see a Southern Carmine Bee eater during a trip to the bush in late February.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. martintayler Avatar

      Thanks Robbie. You have so many beautiful birds in South Africa. We have been lucky enough to visit a few times.

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