Patagonia

And down we went to Patagonia, crossing to Tierra del Fuego for a night and then back to Torres del Paine (via the scenic route).

There are many more (and larger and better quality) on my OneDrive (there’s a link from the Chile 2022 page in trips).

Puma
Torres del Paine
Tawny-throated Dotterel
Rufous-chested Plover
Patagonian Hairy Armadillo
Magellanic Plover
Guanaco
King Penguin
Upland Goose
Black-browed Albatross
Dusky Dolphin
Chilean Skua

Central Chile

Some pictures from the Central Chile part of our trip.

There are many more (and larger and better quality) on my OneDrive (there’s a link from the Chile 2022 page in trips).

Black Skimmer
Kelp Goose
Magellanic Penguin
Dolphin Gull
Flightless Steamer Duck (Chiloe)
Des Murs's Wiretail
Black-faced Ibis
Magellanic Tapaculo
Patagonian Forest Earthcreeper
Austral Parakeet
Thorn-tailed Rayadito
Striped Woodpecker
Chilean Mockingbird
Chestnut-throated Huet-huet
Magellanic Woodpecker
Rufous-legged Owl
White-throated Treerunner
Burrowing Parrot
Burrowing Parrot
Chilean Rose Tarantula
Western Painted Lady
Moustached Turca
Austral Pygmy Owl
Crag Chilia

Northern Chile

Finally, I’ve ploughed through far too many pictures and now can put far too many online.  There here are a few from the northern part of our trip to Chile.

There are many more on my OneDrive (there’s a link from the Chile 2022 page in trips).

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Puna Rhea
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Silvery Grebe (Northern)
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Lauca
005-Chile
Taruca
003-Chile
Markham's Storm Petrel
002-Chile
Chilean Woodstar
001-Chile
Dark-bellied Cinclodes
010-Chile
Puna Ibis
009-Chile
Andean Goose
379D1ED0-B213-4554-A82C-1EE509BE600F
Peruvian Thick-knee
1D184B22-0E43-446E-9438-A400043214AC
Giant Hummingbird
88DEE252-299C-4698-873E-EA0078C263B5
Southern Mountain Viscacha
90003609-98C8-4639-BE22-02E54403B205
Bare-faced Ground Dove
547C1746-8D7C-489B-819D-ADDD599D0AC6
White-throated Earthcreeper
FE0406D8-9D04-4DF6-921E-3AC9718D97CB
Vicuña
649C614F-42BC-4296-BF6C-10FCEAF9B89B
James's (or Puna) Flamingo
34365EAA-A83D-4673-902F-D92C6162617C
Giant Coot
3EF68F0A-6EBA-42C1-969C-98B76F3B254B
White-tufted Grebe
A7F98F4B-325A-467C-972D-8BC12BD851A3
Andean Avocet
83660EBC-2D50-4617-84FE-84E26721E846
Bolivian Big-eared Mouse
FA8D8910-76C6-4A03-BF1B-B7C2C4AD5202
White-chinned Petrel
0FB4B1ED-B56F-49BF-8807-F82730B73DB8
Elliot's Storm Petrel
5BEDC4FE-247B-4ACA-BDC1-629991D595FD
Northern Giant Petrel
1EEF8551-8AD1-42B4-AF07-3C6C2B4C88EC
White-capped Albatross
29F76A7A-9AC1-4325-8516-00C9FFF4B5A3
Humboldt Penguin
E28954A0-4635-4521-A731-62BB30345693
Tamarugo Conebill
E392F4FD-9509-46AD-BC49-7DD3BB4DC1F6
Oasis Hummingbird
CF1470E5-FFD1-4E28-AD2C-E53254E1EA5F
Peruvian Sheartail
AC0EBB91-60ED-424B-A408-5ED7F0C11F9F
Austral Thrush

Worth the wait

In 1982 a young lad watched in wonder when the BBC’s Flight of the Condor series went to Torres del Paine. It immediately became a dream to go there, but obviously it would never happen.

40 years later, today was the day, and it was just as good as I had dreamed as a 14 year old! (And there were Condors).

Heading South

We continue to anger the weather gods, with our one cloudy day being when we were in the mountains with allegedly breathtaking views, followed by two dead calm days for our crossings to Chiloé, meaning that the seabirds were also non-existent. We’re now at Puerto Montt airport waiting for our evening flight to Punta Arenas before we go to Tierra del Fuego tomorrow. There are less scenic airports.

Things are picking up

After a couple of cracking days in the Vilches area, we cleaned out the available species and had some fantastic birds to boot.

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White-throated Treerunner
DAB5718A-C166-4F2E-AF97-1D818353E27B
Burrowing Parrots
3BB30C17-9583-42CF-9B6B-16D7F15B5D58
Chilean Rose Tarantula
F6CC8338-6439-429A-B899-5AE177A2E822
Rufous-legged Owl
4ECBECA3-BE17-491E-9A37-8C6373732371
Western Painted Lady
7A0E6E03-2EA2-4B4E-819B-F562D81E57CE
Magellanic Woodpecker
1CC3214C-619C-472F-B1B6-2ADB66DB7B59
Chestnut-throated Huet-huet

Nothing to laugh at at all

Today was the day we went up to see the Diademed Sandpiper-Plover, one of the most iconic birds in the world and one of the main reasons for coming to Chile.  What a day it was!

Starting with an early departure we hit the El Yeso valley at about 1000, and started with a bang: Moustached Turca and Crag Chilia showing brilliantly at our first stop. Moving on up the valley our luck ran out.  The bus developed a leak and was broken for the day.  On top of that there was a landslide further up the valley that would prevent us from getting to the bog for the Sandpiper-Plover even if we had a fixed bus.  At least three hours standing by a road junction, followed by a farcical game of hunt the hotel, as we tried to find the hotel we were actually booked into, rather than the one we were told, meant that tempers were frayed by the time we got the right one.

Just to finish off the perfect day, we found out that our rescheduled pelagic trip from Sunday (the waves were ferocious and wild) was cancelled for tomorrow, meaning that the two main reasons for coming to Chile had sunk without trace in a single day. Still Chile is a fantastic country, with superb birds.  Things will surely improve… won’t they?

(If you’re not familiar with my quotations, look up  The Lion and Albert: http://holyjoe.org/poetry/edgar.htm)

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Crag Chilia
61CD7D53-BFA8-4BA4-A000-257060877A45
Austral Pygmy Owl
F520FC6B-AFF2-437D-A3A6-D62B4958755A
Moustached Turca

Up on high

We’re back at sea level after a couple of days in the Lauca National Park.  The birding was hard at 15000 feet, but the place was just astonishingly beautiful.

379D1ED0-B213-4554-A82C-1EE509BE600F
Peruvian Thick-knee
1D184B22-0E43-446E-9438-A400043214AC
Giant Hummingbird
88DEE252-299C-4698-873E-EA0078C263B5
Southern Mountain Viscacha
90003609-98C8-4639-BE22-02E54403B205
Bare-faced Ground Dove
547C1746-8D7C-489B-819D-ADDD599D0AC6
White-throated Earthcreeper
FE0406D8-9D04-4DF6-921E-3AC9718D97CB
Vicuña
B21B6CA0-9B27-415E-9137-56F675E1644F
Lauca National Park
649C614F-42BC-4296-BF6C-10FCEAF9B89B
Punta Flamingo
34365EAA-A83D-4673-902F-D92C6162617C
Giant Coot
3EF68F0A-6EBA-42C1-969C-98B76F3B254B
White-tufted Grebe
A7F98F4B-325A-467C-972D-8BC12BD851A3
Andean Avocet

No wrecks and nobody drownded

The waves were indeed piddling and small in today’s pelagic trip out to the continental shelf ~20 km from Iquique.  This made for a comfortable ride, but rather limited our bird list, but a Salvin’s and a White-capped Albatross were good, as was the supporting cast of Storm Petrels and other goodies.

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White-chinned Petrel
0FB4B1ED-B56F-49BF-8807-F82730B73DB8
Elliot’s Storm Petrel
5BEDC4FE-247B-4ACA-BDC1-629991D595FD
Northern Giant Petrel
1EEF8551-8AD1-42B4-AF07-3C6C2B4C88EC
White-capped Albatross
29F76A7A-9AC1-4325-8516-00C9FFF4B5A3
Humboldt Penguin

Dust and Hummers

Day 1 of the tour saw us start of at Arica and travel to Iquique by way of a moonscape.  There were some birds in amongst the dust, though, including a trio of cracking Hummingbirds.

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Chilean Woodstar
E392F4FD-9509-46AD-BC49-7DD3BB4DC1F6
Oasis Hummingbird
CF1470E5-FFD1-4E28-AD2C-E53254E1EA5F
Peruvian Sheartail
E28954A0-4635-4521-A731-62BB30345693
Tamarugo Conebill