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Little egret portrait |
Whilst we had a new kitchen being fitted, me, not liking being in when builders are about, booked a quick trip to one of my favourite destinations, The Camargue on the Mediterranean coast, Rhone estuary, Southern France. Flight from Stansted to Nimes where I picked up a Citroen C1 hire car at a reasonable rate and headed off to check out local places I knew and others I hoped to stumble upon.
I had booked 4 nights in the Hotel Bleu Marine in the splendid town of Saintes Maries de la Mer, right on the coast and known as the capital of The Camargue. Here, there are plenty of restaraunts and bars where a good local meal with drinks will be around £30 per head. However, beer, served in tiny 25cl glasses can cost over £3.00 a glass! After a long 10 mile wander in 24C heat, 25cl is gone in seconds. However, good Cotes de Rhone wine can be bought in the local mini markets for around £5.00 a bottle, so a glass in the hotel room before venturing out for the evening. In May, the town is quiet with very few tourists so easy to wander around and chose a restaraunt. However, in high season, over 20,000 tourists descend upon the town and it can all become a little hectic, plus by August, the famed mosquitos are everywhere, meaning an evening sitting outside eating a meal can be interrupted by waiters spraying you with citronella! Whilst I was there I got a few bites as I stood by brackish pools, but none in the evening as I ate my meals.
Day 1:
I left the airport, having recorded a
black redstart as my first bird of the visit, feeding on the grass outside the arrivals hall and headed to St Gilles where miles of rice fields offered chances to see waders in muddy fields and larger birds in the flooded ones. Quite quickly it became apparent there were no smaller waders about but huge numbers of
glossy ibis along with
white storks,
grey herons,
swallows and
house martins as well as numerous
cattle egrets and
little egrets. A
black kite soared overhead, one of many seen during the visit. A pair of
sandwich tern flew over one particular field, not an everyday bird for me in this region.
House sparrows and
starlings were everywhere whilst
yellow legged gulls and
black headed gulls stood around in the rice fields, doing very little as gulls are prone to do.
I arrived at my hotel and dumped my rucksack, packed up my optical gear and was ready to wander out along a footpath I know well, Le Digue de la Mer, a path that takes you east from Sts Maries and has the Mediterranean on one side and numerous large pools and shallow lakes on the other. A pair of
yellow legged gulls swam along a canalised sluice. A
kestrel got on to the list whilst
shelducks fed on the mud and
mute swans swam in the deeper water. All around me,
Greater flamingoes. After a few miles, I turned back. One area I had planned to check, where there were a few reedbeds and deeper water was now chained, locked and had a sign telling me it was private. On previous occasions I have got some good birds at this site, including hoopoe and small waders. Pity, but this was soon made up for by a close by
Slender billed gull. Usually, these can be found some miles away at Etang du Fangassier and are then a little distant, so great to get better photos of this gull species.
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Yellow legged gulls |
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Slender billed gull |
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Glossy ibis |
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Continental Speckled Wood butterfly |
As I wandered back a quck check on a large flock of gulls gave views of
Mediterranean gull. A
Cetti's warbler exploded into song, several bee eaters overhead. A good start before I wandered into the town for a drink and to get some local photos for a presentation I am giving at the UK Birdfair, Rutland Water. I heard, but could not find a
serin singing from deep inside a conifer tree, whilst on a small pool as I headed back to my room, a
great crested grebe.
I sat outside my room, planning the following days walks with a good glass of wine. My main problem was the fact it was very windy, with gusts up to 30mph and consequently, I was not going to get too many small birds singing from treetops so I needed to head where they may be a little cover. I then headed back into town for a meal and a few beers in a bar where prices were much more acceptable to my budget! Just a few hours birding had realised 29 species. A good start.
Day 2:
Started off fairly early and drove to La Capeliere reserve to the East of the National reserve. As I drove via Albaron spotted more of the same birds as yesterday in the fields, including a
white stork's nest at Pioch-Badet on the main road. I also stopped off as Mas Neuf viewing point where I heard
nightingale before stopping several times to scan the waters of the largest lake, Etang de Vaccares where
great crested grebe were in reasonable numbers and plenty of
black winged stilt in muddy fields.
Fan tailed warblers (now called
Zitting cisticolas) called from hedgerows and flitted across the road, a
skylark rose in the distance and a
pheasant called loudly.
Upon arrival at La Capeliere, I paid the 3 Euro entry and wandered around the 4km route that offers views from a few hides and viewing screens. A
cuckoo could be heard in the distance but on the lake from one hide, just
mallards and
black winged stilts. I walked over the heathland habitat, seeing very little before popping into the reedbed hide where a
reed warbler called, as did a
reed bunting and a few
Sardinian warblers popped up before disapperaring again before I could get a photo. This was my 4th visit to this reserve and have to say, never been over impressed with what is on offer. Considering that there are a superb variety of habitats (wetland, reedbed, heathland, open grassland and woodland) the list from here has always been disappointing.
I returned to the car and headed south along lanes towards Etang du Fangassier on the coast, adjacent to extensive salt flats. Plenty of
bee eaters before I stopped at small lake. Here, several
crested lark on the gravel/sandy track,
yellow wagtails (sub species cinereocapilla) and best of all, a pair of
Squacco herons. I pointed these out to a pair of birders that joined me leaning upon the gate before off to check roadside trees for rollers, but none were noted. A scan over the saltflats at Fangassier gave a view of a
wheatear but nothing else new.
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Squacco heron |
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Saltflats looking towards the lighthouse Phare de la Gacholle |
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More glossy ibis |
I got back in the car and had a drive around the lanes from here towards Port St Louis but by now it was so windy there was little chance of noting much along the roadside, so an about turn and off to a favourite spot, the lane by Mas D'Agon where loads of birds were noted in the rice fields (Rizieres) Again, the wind meant many of the tern species would be grounded, so decided to return when the weather was calmer and headed off to another good reserve, the Parc Ornithologique at Pont-de-Gau. Here, a 7 Euro entry where the first part of the trail is rather zoo like. However, good views of a
nightingale and
melodious warbler were had near the entrance and then a few caged birds but some interesting info boards dotted around before the trail leads you to open lakes upon which are 100's of wild flamingoes. This is where to get best photos of these birds. However, once beyond the main part, by crossing a bridge you come to a 4-5km trail around a large scrape where there are plenty of hides and screens. Again no waders apart from a
common sandpiper and a solitary summer plumaged
spotted redshank, but continually calling nightingales and an overhead
purple heron became my 50th species for the trip.
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Nightingale |
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Melodious warbler |
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Cattle egret in breeding plumage |
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Superb wing plumage on Greater flamingo |
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Little egrets having a territorial dispute |
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Recently fledged Little egret |
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Another wing shot |
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Flamingo portrait |
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Nest building grey heron |
I continued around the scrape, listing
avocet, an adult with 4 recently hatched youngsters before I arrived back at the bridge and a quick, unsuccessful check for black crowned night heron which I normally record here. I got back to the car and headed off along the 6km back to the hotel to check photos, catch up with the list before heading off into town for another restaraunt and a wonderful meal. I intended on an early start on the Wednesday, so back to my room early.
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Black winged stilt |
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Adult avocet being ignored by hatchlings |
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The scrape at Pont-de Gau. |
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Grey Heron |
Day 3:
I awoke early, grabbed a quick coffee and headed off to Le Paty de la Trinitie, just off the main Arles - Sts Maries road, the D570, some 18km north of base. I parked outside the Resto de la Paty and headed further along the road. On the final bend, a farmhouse after which a good path which I have checked many times. Indeed, on previous occassions I have taken this path all the way back to town, some 22km, a good day's wander.
The fields here are good for regular birds:
bee eaters a plenty, egrets but overhead, always a chance of birds of prey and it wasn't long before a
Short toed eagle glided over along with
common buzzards and
black kites.
All along here is heavy vegetation, mainly bramble which contained numerous warbler species:
blackcap,
fan tailed warbler,
nightingale. In high summer there are literally 1000's of dragonfly species, particularly
scarlet and red veined darters, both of which I recorded on this walk. Also a large grasshopper species, including today, an
Egyptian locust, a first for me. Several species of butterfly, too with
Painted lady, R
ed admiral and several unidentified blues being noted. A wonderful place. I eventually arrived at the junction where south takes you the long way back to town whilst north leads to the Paul Ricard ranch, Les Mejanes. I tunred around and headed back to the village, seeing another
short toed eagle and managed a short recording of a
nightingale in full song.
Back on the road, a largish bird flapped lazily into a tree: a
hoopoe, first and only one of the trip.
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Short toed eagle |
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Female red veined darter (it has yellow veins!!) |
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Egyptian locust |
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Same creature |
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Hiding hoopoe |
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White stork |
Back at the car, I headed back towards town to the other end of the main path at Mas du Cacherel to see what I could add to the ever increasing list. I parked near the hotel and got my first (and only)
oystercatcher of the trip from the roadside. I then decided to take a walk northwards and glad I did.
Little grebe called from unseen pools behind stands of reeds where several
bearded tits also called. 3
Spoonbill flew overhead and a
great white egret could just be seen wandering around in the reeds. The first of many
Great reed warblers could also be heard before I turned back and decided to drive the whole length of the unmade road, eventually emerging on the D37 not far from Albaron.
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One of the reasons you don't wander off the track on to private land! |
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Frequently seen sign |
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Great white egret |
I hadn't driven far when a crested lark landed on the road, a quick photo through the windscreen. Several gadwall were recorded upon pools and then, as I turned a corner, a Roller! Always a great bird to see. A Lesser black backed gull in with lodas of yellow legged gulls and my first tawny pipit upon a barbed wire fence. I stopped on several occassions just to see what was calling but the only thing new was a scratchy warble that I couldn't identify from behind an old bar, cafe, long since abandoned on the shore of Etang de Vacarres. Possibly Spectacled warbler but I didn't get a glimpse, ceratinly a call I am not familiar with.
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Crestted lark, photographed through the windscreen |
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Greater flamingoes at the beginning of the track at Mas de Cacherel |
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Heat haze shot of a tawny pipit |
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Roller, also affected by the heat haze as it was now very bright and 24C |
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Gloriously colourful bee eater |
Following this drive, I returned to Mas d'Agon to check the fileds where I met 2 fellow birders. The wind had now dropped from the previous day, although still gusty but over the tops of the reeds
black terns, whiskered terns and 5
white winged black terns dipped for food.
Spoonbills, little and great white egrets, flamingoes, a hobby overhead,
great reed warblers, reed warblers, glossy ibis etc. A great place and typical roadside birding that The Camargue offers. Sadly, the birds here are easily identifiable with binoculars, but a scope would be good. I had opted not to bring mine so hope I didn't miss too much. Consequently, distance plus heat haze and gusty wind meant not great photos, especially of the immaculate plumage of the
white winged black terns. I chatted with a chap who does guided tours and heard about one or two other hotspots which I shall visit on my next trip.
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White winged black tern |
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white winged black tern and whiskered tern |
I left, planning on returning here early the next morning where more may be seen and hopefully the wind will have dropped. Also, the heat haze would not be an issue. I headed off to the hotel, parked the car and took another wander along a path from the hotel to Le Digue track. Here, I took a path into the middle of the area where a pair of
Kentish plovers were flushed. An
icterine warbler popped up from a tamarisk tree as I scanned the distant mudflats. Here:
ringed plover, 4 summer plumaged
grey plovers along with one still in winter colours, several
dunlin all made the trip list. I continued, spotting regular birds for the area before I returned to the hotel before off into town for another meal.
Day 4:
I woke early and was back at Mas d'Agon by 7.15. The light was good but no sign of the white wingers. However, both
reed warbler and
great reed warbler were noted, singing from the reed beds by the side of the road, affording good photo opportunities. A strange bleating call, not dissimilar to a lamb attracted my attention, coming from the waterlogged ditch. There,
3 coypu were washing and eating. A common mammal for this area. The noise was coming from a juvenile, obviously wanting attention.
Black tern numbers seemed to have increased but as I scanned across the mud I realised that the whole wetland went back a good half mile, behind more reeds and here were many more terns, too far away for a photo. 2
Great white egrets and several
spoonbill were also present before I decided that a drive inland and up into the hills to Le Baux would be good. This is a medieval walled hilltop town where, to reach the remains of the chateau at the top, there is an 8 Euro entry fee. I had a quick look around, scanned the nearby mountains for any birds of prey, just another
black kite. However,
crag martins and
alpine swifts whizzed around, too fast for the camera whilst
serins and
black redstarts called from plenty of the conifers present. A worthwhile trip with fascinating history.
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Great reed warbler |
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Spoonbills |
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Great reed warbler in full voice |
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Reed warbler |
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Great white egret |
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Coypu |
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Male serin |
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Black redstart |
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Female serin |
Le Baux was becoming very busy so I took a final walk around the top of the hill before descending through the narrow streets to the car and off to St Martin de Crau and a walk around Etang des Aulnes. This is a heathland type habitat with well established deciduous trees and a wonderful place for butterflies and dragonflies as well as regular bird species. On the lake, just
mallard and
great crested grebe, 2
gadwall flew through but in the trees were trip listers in the form of
song thrush,
mistle thrush, green woodpecker, Jackdaw, Greenfinch and
chaffinch.
A
Clouded buff moth was flushed as were several
red veined darters and another
scarlet darter before several blue butterfly species were noted. I suspect this place would be brilliant to spend a night running a few moth traps and netting with a headtorch.
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Possibly Amanda's blue but not convinced. Any offers? |
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Clouded buff macro moth, a new moth for me. |
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Green underside Blue, a mating pair |
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Red veined darter female |
From this excellent habitat I made my way back via dual carriageway to Arles and, once again, Mas d'Agon. Here more coypu but nothing to add apart from a flyover
purple heron. The white wingers were nowehere to be seen as I chatted with a British couple cycling their way back to their hotel in Arles.
So back to Rue de Cacherel and another brief walk up the track before back to the hotel and my last evening out, having a couple of beers in a local bar after my meal. The following morning I planned on making the most of my time before having to return the car at about 3pm at the airport for a 16.25 flight home.
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Contented coypu |
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Flamingoes arriving at Mas d'Agon fields |
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Air brakes applied |
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Swallow |
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House martin resting on purpose built shelf next to its nest. |
Day 5:
I awoke around 5.30am, got dressed and packed my gear which had been charging overnight. Locked the hotel door, stepped outside to find it wonderfully calm but raining! I thought I may as well drive a little inland to see what was about at first light and hoped the rain would stop, which it did for a while. I intended to check roadside pools along the main road so headed towards Albaron for a strong coffee at L'Agachon hotel and bar, a place I have visited many times. From here I made my way to an old bridge not far from the lookout point as Mas Neuf where, in previous years, I have had great views of bee eaters. I scanned to the north, whilst listening to
nightingales and
fan tailed warblers. a
Sardinian warbler popped up and down before my camera had focused. A bird shot out from a bush, hovered in fly catching mode before returning to the far side of the bush, a
Pied flycatcher, female. A first for me in the region. A good start to the day. I scanned even further afield and latched on to a very distant (2 miles+) large bird of prey. I tracked it as it slowly came my way, noting a white rump and a flash of black on the wing. A
Montague's harrier, another first for The Camargue for me. A
red legged partridge got on to the trip list as it scuttled across the road.
I returned to the car just as the rain began again, so worked my way back down the main road, checking roadside habitats from the car. I eventually got back to the hotel and checked out. This hotel was perfect for me, a clean, well presented room that was tidied and remade every morning, space for all my gear and a patio door out to a small swimming pool, all for less than £60 per night. Very helpful and friendly owners and receptionist and handy for all that the town of Saintes Maries de la Mer has to offer. I shall use it again.
I then set off west towards the Petit Rhone, again, checking roadside habitats before turning towards St. Gilles and the rice fields I visited upon arrival. Nothing new but plenty of good birds.
I knew of a habitat next to the airport, so thought I may as well drive the last 10km, fill up the tank and return the car. All done by 1.30pm so off down the lane to the right of the airport as you leave the building and before you cross the dual carriageway by bridge.
Past the offices and airport infrastructure industries there is a area of scrubby waste land surrounded by trees and having good stands of bramble in which many warblers skulk. A
blackcap called as did a
reed bunting.
Jackdaws, wood pigeons, goldfinches and numerous
starlings were all here as were several small, unidentified butterflies and a moth, I think to be a Four spotted, or continental similar. However, the highlight was seeing 2
bee eaters sitting symmetrically on a branch. Sadly I was far off so just managed a quick photo before they flew off as I tried to approach unseen. Great view to finish a marvellous trip
Soon time was up, check in, board the flight, a g&t on board and I was back at Stansted by 5.45pm. Good to be home and checking my pedometer, over 37 miles walked in the time I was there.
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Glossy ibis from the car at Albaron |
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Bee eaters near Nimes/Garons airport |
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What I think to be 4 spotted moth, a first for me. |
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Yellow wagtail sub species cinereocapilla |
Species list:
- Black redstart
- swallow
- common swift
- house martin
- sand martin
- glossy ibis
- cattle egret
- little egret
- black kite
- sandwich tern
- house sparrow
- starling
- magpie
- yellow legged gull
- slender billed gull
- kestrel
- grey heron
- Mallard
- shelduck
- mute swan
- Serin
- greater flamingo
- mediterranean gull
- black headed gull
- bee eater
- cetti's warbler
- coot
- moorhen
- great cretsed grebe
- nightingale
- great tit
- chaffinch
- black winged stilt
- zitting cisticola
- skylark
- pheasant
- sardinian warbler
- cuckoo
- reed warbler
- reed bunting
- squacco heron
- yellow wagtail, sub sp cinereocapilla
- Crested lark
- wheatear
- goldfinch
- collared dove
- avocet
- common sandpiper
- purple heron
- spotted redshank
- wood pigeon
- hoopoe
- blackcap
- oystercatcher
- little grebe
- great white heron
- spoonbill
- great reed warbler
- bearded tit
- gadwall
- Roller
- lesser black backed gull
- tawny pipit
- whiskered tern
- white winged black tern
- hobby
- cormorant
- gull billed tern
- icterine warbler
- kentish plover
- grey plover
- dunlin
- ringed plover
- jackdaw
- jay
- greenfinch
- green woodpecker
- song thrush
- mistle thrush
- black tern
- crag martin
- alpine swift
- montague's harrier
- pied flycatcher
- white wagtail
- red legged partrisge
- red kite
- blackbird
- common buzzard
Sure there are a few I have missed but a pleasing total nevertheless.
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Goldfinch |
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Purple heron over Mas d'Agon |
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Saintes Maries de la Mer on my way home |
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Moon over the town church. |
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