I take the point Mark. 'Many' really means 'too idle to count them'
Mark Rigby said
Fri Feb 27 4:28 PM, 2009
Not the dreaded notebook
Many? is that like 40+
-- Edited by Mark Rigby at 16:29, 2009-02-27
John Rayner said
Fri Feb 27 10:47 AM, 2009
Just back from 2 days excellent birding in sunny Portugal. By using all available hours of daylight we managed a superb haul of 92 species including one Western Palearctic rarity and some WP introductions. Highlights, in notebook order, included:
Red & Black Kites (many)
White Storks (many, breeding and display)
Azure-winged Magpie (2)
Montague's, Hen and Marsh Harriers
Hoopoe (1)
Sardinian Warbler (c10 mostly heard)
Subalpine Warbler (1)
Griffon Vulture (c25)
Black Vulture (1)
* Rupell's Vulture * (1 - present for it's 6th year)
Black Stork (1)
Rock Bunting (1)
Black-shouldered Kite (2)
Spotless Starlings (many)
Crested Myna (16, introduced)
Greater Flamingo (53)
Zitting Cisticolas (many)
Cetti's Warbler (many)
Common Waxbill (c30, introduced)
Black-headed Weaver (c20, introduced)
Crested Larks (many)
Booted Eagle (1 pale phase)
Short-toed Larks
Lesser Kestrel (few)
Black-headed Munia (3, introduced)
Yellow-crowned Bishop (c12, introduced)
Southern-grey Shrikes (few)
Calandra Lark (2, display flight)
Great Bustard (minimum of 87, yes 87!! including a single winter flock of 76)
Black-bellied Sandgrouse (9)
Plus lots of migrants headed our way - Little-ringed Plover, Swallow, House Martin, Sand Martin, Yellow Wagtail, Chiffchaff etc.
I'll try to write a short trip report soon but one point to highlight is that the flights from East Midlands to Faro were a ludicrously cheap £10 return including all taxes. I can't get to Wigan and back for that!!!!
Cheers, John
Many? is that like 40+
-- Edited by Mark Rigby at 16:29, 2009-02-27