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| Winter birding (May-August) is less productive though the miombo specials can still be found, especially in bird-parties, and there is an influx of Swallow-tailed Bee-eater. Mid to late August brings on breeding and the woodlands ring with bird song and activity. You can expect miombo specials like Spotted Creeper, Whyte’s Barbet, White-breasted Cuckooshrike, Miombo Tit, Green-capped Eremomela, African Golden Oriole, Southern Hyliota and Miombo Blue-eared Starling. Black Cuckooshrike, Yellow-fronted Tinkerbird and Variable Sunbird are common and the less common African Cuckoo Hawk, Red-faced Crombec and Green-backed Honeybird and many others could be found. By November most of the migrants have returned and a list of over 100 is typical. |
Check along the stream and reedbeds for Senegal Coucal, occasional Copper Sunbird (in flowering Waterberry trees around September) and the usual weavers, bishops and warblers. Purple-crested Turacos are in this area and neighbouring gardens. Long-crested Eagles often nests in the gums towards the southwest corner and an unusual bird for Harare, the Yellow-breasted Apalis, can sometimes be found in acacia section. There is a log-bridge across the small stream which flows from the public area, and another atypical Harare bird can be found in the riverine here – the Black-throated Wattle-eye.
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