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Musiewild's blog

~ An occasional blog, mainly photos

Musiewild's blog

Tag Archives: laughing dove

Cyprus, December 2025 – 6

22 Thursday Jan 2026

Posted by Musiewild in Cats, Countryside views, Photography, Wildlife

≈ 10 Comments

Tags

Aphrodite Beach HOtel, Cyprus, Laksi, Latchi, laughing dove, Narcissus tazetta, Troodos lizard

Thursday, 25th. Driver Andreas had Christmas Day off, of course, and we set off on foot. But not before observing these three Laughing doves on the roof of one of hotel buildings.

Having turned right, westwards, along the road on Sunday, this time we turned left,

but soon went inland (south) into the hills, following a large arc, eventually back to the road.

I have no explanation of this formation. Part of an old castle? Not another sign of it so. A geological erratic? No idea.
Growing at the roadside at the edge of a property. I enjoyed the sunlight though the flowers.

Stella, the hotel dog, (who seemed to get on well with the nine cats) chose to accompany us. This troubled the leaders, though I didn’t understand why – clearly she knew her way around very well. It turned out it was for fear she would flush out creatures we might hope to see.

I looked back towards the location of the hotel. Is that a storm on the horizon?

Giant carrot
Someone’s eagle eyes spotted a Troodos lizard on the trunk of this carob tree.
The zoom on my camera helped me find it.
Crown anemone
Fan-lipped orchid about to burst into flower
Narcissus Tazetta

We started to feel the odd spot of rain.

We made our way down the hillside, crossed the main road, and started to make our way down the the beach, via more rocky pools. The intention was to walk back to the hotel along the beach. But the rain was too much for some of us, and we decided just to walk back along the road to the hotel. I had a brolly with me, fortunately. Less fortunately, about half way back (in total about a mile) the ankle that had played me up near Fort Augustus in May started playing me up again. Once home from that trip, I had bought some ankle-strengtheners, but after a few weeks had had no more problems with it, so it hadn’t crossed my mind to pack them for Cyprus. My walking pole was a boon, as I limped along the road. (No photos – pole and umbrella occupied my hands!) I lagged behind as the others overtook me, and was very happy indeed when I made it back to my room, where I had my packed lunch.

The rest of the party was not, as I gathered later, much further behind.

The rain stopped, the sun came out, my ankle had recovered somewhat after a couple of hours’ rest, and I felt very deprived of the beach walk to which I had been much looking forward. So I set off mid-afternoon, quite gingerly, from the hotel, to treat myself on my own. (A few of the others, I understand, caught the bus – running on Christmas Day – back to Aphrodite’s pool, and continued their explorations of the Akamas peninsula that had been foiled by Sunday’s thunderstorms.)

Down to the beach was quite a steep slope.

I looked down and noticed I had one of the cats for company.

Surely he would leave one I got to the wet sand, I thought. But no. In fact he left me at what appeared to be the exact boundary between the hotel and the next property.

I didn’t go far, but was out for about an hour. Not only was walking not easy on the loose, coarse sand, on a steeply sloping beach, but I was mesmerised by the surf and just stood there watching for ages. I took dozens of photos, and a few videos, much thinned out here, the Troodos Mountains to the east for backdrop. The noise!

As aften happens when I am solitary on a beach, the lovely ‘On the beach at night alone‘, from Vaughan Williams’s Sea Symphony, words by Walt Whitman, came to mind.

I climbed back up the slope to the hotel, made for the bar, and had a hot chocolate. I had grown a little chilly standing around with the sun going down.

For our dinner, a few of us had brought Christmassy wear. I had knitted mine, a dress in fact, and was very gratified at comments, including from a Dutch woman who jumped up from her group’s table to compliment me on it as I was passing. As for the meal, among the many choices, including vegetarian, were the elements of a full British traditional Christmas dinner, as there had been the night for the benefit of those who have their main festive meal on the 24th. There was also a huge Christmas cake, spicy and rather lighter in texture than we are used to.

As I walked back to my room, in a separate building, I puzzled at how it was, just a few days after the winter solstice, the sun should hit the moon at a lower angle in a country so much further south than the UK, given that both countries are north of the Tropic of Cancer. I’m still puzzling.

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Namibia/Botswana/Zambia 6

24 Sunday Mar 2019

Posted by Musiewild in Photography, Travel, Wildlife

≈ 14 Comments

Tags

black-backed jackal, black-winged stilt, blacksmith lapwing, Blue crane, elephant, Etosha agama, European bee-eater, gemsbok, giraffe, hoopoe, Hyena, laughing dove, lilac-breasted roller, northern black korhaan, oryx, Ostrich, Pale chanting goshawk, pearl-spotted owlet, red-eyed bulbul, vulture, Wildebeest, zebra

After as early a breakfast as the hours of Mokuti Lodge would allow, we set off for the morning’s drive.

Very near the roadside and indignant at being disturbed.
Lilac-breasted roller. I seem to have taken a lot of photos of this species. They seem to be quite co-operative. And pretty.
?
?
Risking the slight irritation of my birdy companions, I asked if we could stop for a photo of these palms, which we had seen the day before without stopping. My companions were in fact quite pleased, in the event, since …
… they spotted in one of them what we would note at the of the day as a white-backed vulture.
?
Northern black korhaan. If I were to go by my bird book I would say it might be a White-quilled bustard but that is not on our checklist, and it has a different Latin name.
Blue crane
Black-winged stilt and very blurry ‘duck’. ?Teal?
We came across a lot of ostriches.
Many, many ostriches.
A male (black) and a female (brown)
To me they seem rather sinister when you can only see necks and legs
Strutting their stuff
Showing their irritation I think. We had hung around for a while.

We stopped for unexpected mid-morning hot drinks, prepared and served by our leaders.

Any stop provides an opportunity for looking out for birds.

African red-eyed bulbul

Someone said, rather patronisingly, that this bird was far too far off for me to be able to take with my small camera. Well, ya boo shucks! Pearl-spotted owl(et). Book says ‘appears dumpy, large-headed and short-tailed’. Yup!
Laughing dove. Soooo pretty!

And we continued on our way.

European bee-eater

How leader Neil managed as he was driving along to spot this motionless creature by the side of the road, so well camouflaged against its background, I couldn’t say. ‘Experience’, they said.

Etosha Agama (lizard)
Hoopoe
Pale chanting goshawk

We arrived at a waterhole, where we were to observe wildlife drama. Wildebeest and zebra were standing around, preparing to drink, but then along came an elephant troop.

A hyena sloped off.

Indeed, two elephant troops arrived – and merged.

To take over the pool entirely. I love the way giraffe’s heads show up against a treeline.
After drinking, mud baths are in order
A gemsbok/oryx arrived, but did not yet go near the pool.
Wildebeest hold back
As do giraffe. The bolder zebra were soon ‘discouraged’.
Two of which took it out on each other.
In due course the elephants did move off…
And the first to drink in the, by now very disturbed, waters were a black-backed jackal and a blacksmith lapwing.

It was time to return to the lodge for lunch and a siesta.

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Namibia/Botswana/Zambia 3

19 Tuesday Mar 2019

Posted by Musiewild in Cats, Countryside views, Photography, Travel, Wildlife

≈ 14 Comments

Tags

black rhino, black-backed jackal, blacksmith lapwing, elephant, Etosha National Park, Etosha Pan, glossy starling, Halali camp, Hyena, Impala, kudu, laughing dove, Lion, marabou stork, Namibia, red hartebeest, rhino, Rock kestrel, Scops owl, secretary bird, Spotted hyena, Springbok, Striped mongoose, whydah, zebra

Monday, morning, 25th February. Here is a map of Etosha National Park. ”Etosha“>http://a href=”https://www.etoshanationalpark.org”><img src=”https://www.etoshanationalpark.org/media/Etosha-Map2.jpg” alt=”Etosha National Park Map” title=”Etosha National Park Map”/></a>

It’s huge. Etosha Pan itself is 75 miles/120 kilometres long. This is a dried up lake, the salt from which affects the land to its south. We had entered the NP by Anderson Gate, in the middle of the Park, and Halali Camp is a little over a third of the way along the Pan to the northwest of the Gate. The map shows the many waterholes.

After a very early breakfast, we went out for a ‘game’ drive. It was not quite as light as my camera made out to begin with.

Black-backed jackal
Our first lion, a female with a nasty but healing wound. She seems to have the remains of a kill.
Springbok and Striped Mongooses
Secretary bird, the last we were to see
Our first elephant, much further off than it appears from this maximum zoom photo
The Pan in the middle ground
Rock kestrel?. No, a lesser kestrel according to BL.
And then we heard a lion was on its way. Our leaders positioned the vehicles near the pool it was thought to be heading for.
What a handsome beast!
He roared for his females. It was loud! Nothing like the gentle huffing in the following video taken from a new spot we had moved to
He stopped, examined us …
… and then moved off. We did not see his females.
We continued on our way, and I’m starting to recognise a blacksmith lapwing.
What’s that venturing its head out of a (dried up of course) culvert?…
… A spotted hyena
Another black rhino – or rather two!

When we got back to Halali Camp, it was still relatively early, and we had a couple of hours off. The Camp had no free wifi, but our vehicles did, and I spent some time in one of them (as it was being driven to get fuel and then parked somewhere in the camp) catching up with vital home political news. (For those interested in such things, I learned that THAT vote, due already for the nth time on 27th February, was being put off again for two weeks.)

Before lunch, the group walked five minutes to the waterhole a few had visited the previous evening. En route we saw in the camp grounds, among other things, …

a Cape glossy starling (we were to see many varieties of beautiful starling in the two weeks),
and an African Scops owl, trying to sleep, a bit fed up with the attention. To quote from my bird book, ‘ … its cryptic colouring makes detection difficult. This camouflage is further enhanced by its habit of depressing its fathers to appear long and thin, raising its ear tufts and half-closing its eyes, creating the illusion of a tree stump.’

Once at the waterhole, where we were comfortably seated, we saw plenty of life.

Kudu and Marabou stork
Red-billed teal
Kudu
Laughing dove and Long-tailed paradise whydahs (?)
I think this is the male of a species of Paradise whydah in transition to breeding plumage, but I’m not sure
Impalas practising. Elephant dung gets everywhere.
Marabou stork
Long-tailed Paradise-Whydahs, male and female
The pool was not empty for long
Red hartebeest
And this I how the pool was when we left for our lunch.

It had been quite a morning!

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