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Post Info TOPIC: Dubai


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Posts: 90
Date:
RE: Dubai


Back to Dubai last week for a few days, determined to get out of the city this time. I looked at Tommy Pedersen's excellent website, www.uaebirding.com, and decided to contact local birder Neil Tovey, who offers full or half day birding trips. A half day costs around £100 for up to 4 people, and for that, my husband and I were picked up from our hotel at 5.30am ( to avoid the 38 degree afternoon heat) by Neil in his 4x4. Unlimited cool soft drinks and snacks were included, and a very informative UAE bird list book, "The Sandgrouse", for me to keep.

We drove out of the city to a small lake, then the legendary pivot fields, then to a saltwater lagoon with mudflats, then to a beach with a breakwater, passing through 4 of the Emirates. By the time we had been returned to our hotel at 12.30 pm, we had seen over 70 species of waders, passerines, raptors , seabirds etc etc, including the local speciality of crab plover. The final half hour looking out over the Gulf was the most spectacular, when around 50,000 Socotra cormorants all converged on a shoal of fish, looking like a Biblical plague, turning the sky and the sea black.

Neil was an excellent, enthusiastic and very knowledgeable guide. A brilliant value excursion in every way.

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Status: Offline
Posts: 90
Date:

I was in Dubai last week, and while my husband was working, I had a few days holiday. Avoiding the shopping malls was a priority. I had no transport apart from taxis and the Metro, so most of the exciting but less accessible birding venues were out.

Fortunately, our hotel was just across from the Media City offices, which all face onto a small artificial lake, edged by a few palm trees and ornamental bushes, with some parched and scrubby grass. Early morning and evening visits to this tiny green space in the glass and concrete jungle revealed:

A flock of hybrid mallard/farmyard type ducks
A pair of Egyptian geese
About 40 black-headed gulls
1 slender-billed gull
8 little grebe, lots of displaying behaviour, one sitting on a nest in a reed clump
Countless noisy common myna and house crows
3 pied myna
1 red vented bulbul
1 chiffchaff
1 hoopoe
1 red-wattled lapwing
1 common sandpiper
1 common kingfisher
1 graceful prinia
Countless Indian variety house sparrows

At each visit I was scolded by security guards, who said taking photos was forbidden, as the media company HQs nearby made this a "sensitive area". However, when I reassured them that I was only birdwatching, and showed them my binocs and bird id book, they were quite friendly, clearly thinking that I was bonkers.

I also managed to visit Safa Park, which added:
Grey francolin
Collared dove
Laughing dove
Ring necked parakeet
Indian roller
White eared bulbul
Marsh warbler
Purple sunbird
Red vented bulbul

The "women and children only" section of the park was particularly quiet, and the bulbuls could be seen in the evening making quick flights from the bushes to catch insects.

Emirates Golf Course was also accessible, with a perimeter path that allowed views of the course. This added:
Eastern Cattle egret
Green bee-eater
Tree pipit
Pale rockfinch
Swift

In all, I was very happy with the birding that could be managed in Dubai with little time and few resources.




-- Edited by Lynne Webster on Thursday 5th of April 2012 08:40:51 AM

-- Edited by Lynne Webster on Thursday 5th of April 2012 10:15:54 AM

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