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| Wood Pipit is usually found, sometimes along the roads, and also regularly at the flat rocks west of the picnic site. Just a little north of this and in the line of granite outcrops west of the small dam and stream is a good place to look for Boulder Chat, though sometimes they are absent and you may have to check other kopjies. Bird parties are what you are looking for and where you can get the specials together – Spotted Creeper, Green-capped Eremomela, Red-faced Crombec, Whyte’s Barbet, Brown and Green-backed Honeybirds, African Golden Oriole, Miombo Tit and Rufous-bellied plus Grey Penduline-tit, White-breasted Cuckooshrike, woodpeckers and Fork-tailed Drongo, Southern Hyliota, Wood Pipit, shrikes, Miombo Double-collared Sunbird, African Yellow-white-eye and more. Collared Flycatcher has been recorded in the past, in woodland across the stream west of the bush camp, so look out for him in the rainy season whilst Tree Pipits are generally distributed. |
Other good birds in the woodlands include Shelley’s and Coqui Francolins, Miombo Rock-thrush, Cabanis’s Bunting and Black-eared Seedeaters. The area has vleis dividing the woodlands so look here for Croaking Cisticolas, Copper Sunbirds, Yellow-mantled Widowbirds, Orange-breasted Waxbills, African Quailfinch, etc. A nice selection of raptors can be found including African Cuckoo Hawk, African Hawk-eagle, Long-crested Eagle, African Crowned Eagle, accipiters and falcons.
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