
Nepal boasts 848 recorded species of birds. An ardent bird
watcher can travel the length and breadth of Nepal doing little
else but bird watching. Birding is possible everywhere in
Nepal from the hot plains in the south, the Kathmandu Valley
in the mid hills, to the mountainous regions of the north.
The Kathmandu Valley has four major bird
watching areas, and one can start on the banks of the Bagmati
and Manohra rivers. Birds sighted along these rivers are the
Egrets, Herons, Kingfishers, Ibisbill, Wood Sandpipers and
Plovers. The Chobar gorge is particularly recommended as an
area for birds as its isolation from human habitation has
encouraged their presence.
hulchowki is another ideal site, with a Red-headed
Trogan, a very rare bird sighted there in April 2000. (It
was last seen in Nepal 44 years ago.) Phulchowki is 2760 metres
and 18kms southeast of Kathmandu, and is reached via Godavari
and the Botanical gardens. Walking can start from behind the
gardens, with a combination of trails and roads. The hillside
is covered with forest featuring outstanding flora as well
as diverse birds. About 90 species have been recorded in this
area including the endemic Spring Babbler, as well as the
Cutia, Mountain Hawk Eagle, Rufous Bellied Pied Woodpeckers
and the Black-throated Parrotbill, to name a few.
Two other areas of the valley are The Shivapuri
Watershed and Wildlife Reserve, 12kms north of the city, and
Nagarjun in the north west. Shivapuri can be reached two ways,
either from Sundarijal or Budanilkaantha. The reserve is managed
by the Nepalese Army and it costs NRs. 250/- for foreigners
to enter. (NRs. 1,000/- is charged for a movie or video camera).
Some of the birds in this area are the Laughing Thrush, Crested
Serpent Eagle, Little Pied Fly Catchers, Ruby - Throats, and
Babblers. At Nagarjun at 2105 metres pheasants, magpies, sunbirds
and ruby-throats are found.
Koshi Barrage and Koshi Tappu Wildlife Reserve
are in the eastern Terai, to the far east of Nepal. The Koshi
is great for waterfowl and waders, with about 26 varieties
of ducks alone. Here the method of viewing is by boat, gliding
through the waters in the stillness of the early morning and
evenings. Over 450 species have been sighted here, including
Black Ibis, Honey Kites, Ospreys, Black Headed Orioles, Peregrine
Falcon, Partidges, and storks.
Chitwan is in the lowlands of Nepal, known
as the Terai. The Royal Chitwan National Park is the best
known site in Nepal for bird-watching. Bird watching needs
to be done from the safety of a chair, the back of an elephant
or in a jeep (by far the last In Pokhara , 200 kilometers
west of Kathmandu, the forests around the banks of Phewa Lake
and Begnas Lake are ideal for bird watching, particularly
in the less inhabited areas. In winter around Phewa Lake you
find egrets, herons, pipits, buntings plus gulls, terns, ducks
and falcons. Begnas Lake has slopes and wet fields surrounding
it, where ducks, pheasant-tailed Jacana, Happie Grey Bellied
Tesias, and bulbuls are seen.
Royal Bardia National Park is covered with
Sal forest and riverine forest and grassland much like Chitwan,
but Bardia has the mighty Karnali river flowing by the park.
Boating on the Karnali is a great way to see the birds, and
one would see the Ruddy Shellduck, Oriental Pied Hornbills,
Night Herons and Purple Herons, plus many more. In the higher
areas of Nepal the trek routes are good for birdwatching,
including the Jomson Trek, the Annapurna Recently a rare bird
known as Jerdon's Baza was sighted in Nepal.
Over the past few years a conservation group
has worked specifically in the Lumbini area to conserve the
Sarus Crane. Wetlands have been constructed in the Lumbini
area to provide refuge for Sarus Cranes and other wetland
birds.
Four hundred thousand saplings have been
planted in the area of the crane sanctuary. The cranes are
among the world s most endangered of birds, the world s tallest
flying bird, it is thought there are fewer than 500 remaining
in Nepal. In dedication to the Sarus Crane a thangka has been
made called Wheel of Crane Conservation for use as educational
material, with the art based on the Buddhist wheel of life
philosophy.
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