Tuesday, October 8, 2024

Colombia Day 9 - Full day on Camino Montezuma Part 1 (14Aug2024)

We woke up very early so we could make it up to the summit on the Camino Montezuma shortly after first light. The Camino Montezuma is a dirt road that extends 12 km long and 1,200 meters high through the forest starting at the Lodge.  The terminus of the road is a military base on the summit at 2,500 meters (8,200 feet).


Some of the scenery on the way up.  We used three 4x4 vehicles to make it up the snaky and shaky road.  At the top we got out and the Montezuma staff set to work in providing a nice breakfast for us and the birds.  Old nectar was discarded and the feeders were replenished.


Collared Inca - one of the high elevation hummers.


The view!


Tourmaline Sunangel


Green-crowned Brilliant


Chestnut-bellied Flowerpiercer!  This Colombian endemic is very restricted in range and this is one of the best places to see them.


This is the range chart courtesy of Wikipedia.


Collared Inca female


Velvet-purple Coronet


Empress Brilliant


Smoky Bush-Tyrant


Violet-tailed Sylph


Chestnut-bellied Flowerpiercer

The guide played a little Andean Pygmy Owl and we had one responding.  However, we also started a little tanager feeding flock commotion in a tree that was 100 yards downslope.


Blue-and-black Tanager


Beryl-spangled Tanager


Blue-capped Tanagers


Lacrimose Tanager


Rufous Spinetail


Purplish-mantled Tanager

I could have stayed up there all day, but we had to start heading downslope.  The local guides and drivers from the lodge planned multiple stops at little roadside huts with hummingbird feeders at which they replaced nectar and usually also offered hot chocolate and a snack to us.  I think I gained a couple pounds before we made it back down. 


Velvet-purple Coronet


Tourmaline Sunangel with no light shining on gorget.


What a difference a slight move of the head makes.  Its very hard to get a shining gorget and a profile shot at the same time.


Munchique Wood-Wren - another Colombian endemic!  It was previously lumped with the Gray-breasted Wood-wren.


These mountains are super biodiverse including plants and insects.  I am not sure if this was an orchid or a bromeliad.


An Orchid.



Black-throated Tody-tyrant - this was the only shot I managed.


Golden-fronted Redstart - in contrast to the eastern cordillera, these birds of the western range only have yellow and black colors.  If you can remember from one of my previous posts, the eastern birds have white markings on their faces.


Yellow-vented Woodpecker


Beryl-spangled Tanager - I hope to properly crush this species in the future. They always stayed at long range during this trip requiring heavy cropping.

This last picture was at 10am!  So much content! I am going to have to generate a part deux for this one.





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