2023A (2024) has dawned upon us. It has been three years since Covid-19 wrecked havoc and tested the resolve of medical frontliners all over the world. I visited Tanjung Karang on the eve and first day of the New Year. After driving past a row of tapioca trees, I drove onto a road alongside rows of paddyfield fields and spotted a flock of Black-winged Stilts roosting in a block of paddyfield that was filled with water. This was on the eve of New Year’s Day. Tiny dots of stilts in this field as pictured below:-
Selangor's well-known tourist spots along coastal areas would be places like Kuala Selangor, Kapar and Port Klang. Taman Alam Kuala Selangor is a wetlands nature reserve, and Jeram beach areas are wetland sites where one may venture to find waders and shorebirds. I've read about the shorebirds count conducted at Kapar Power Stations. I've personally never done a count there before. A smaller flock of stilts was seen on same ricefield paddy block on New Year’s Day below:-
A global not-for-profit organization called Wetlands International has an office in Malaysia and their website can be explored HERE . They safeguard and restore wetlands for people and nature and 2023 appeared to be a busy period for them as they hosted climate week in Johor, a Mangrove restoration programme in Bagan Pasir, Selangor, a workshop in Penang amongst others. Wetlands International appear to be the only international organization that is dedicated to the conservation and restoration of wetlands.
Tiny dots of stilts which I viewed through my binoculars (from inside my car) and hearing their calls from quite a far distance on New Year's eve when I was headed out of the paddyfields around 5pm that Sunday. Whilst on my return trip to KL, I managed to buy my mother’s favourite asam laksa from the Selayang night market. Not been birding consistently so seeing and hearing this flock of stilts was pure joy to me as I began my New Year thinking about these stilts which I kept mixing up with stints. In February 2022, flocks of Grey-headed Lapwings were spotted in one of these paddyfield plots in Tanjung Karang. A picture of one of these flocks of lapwings as depicted below and a photo which captured the beautiful emerald hues of a Northern Lapwing on the cover of Taiwan's Nature Conservation Quarterly Winter 2023 edition (see below) both showcase two different species of lapwings. Peninsular Malaysia has had a record of a vagrant Northern Lapwing sighting in Rompin, Pahang before. Here's to many more records of such sightings of both Grey-headed and the Northern Lapwings!
Project focus on wild birds by Canon at
ReplyDeletehttps://global.canon/en/environment/bird-branch/photo-gallery/enaga/index.html
The Birds Guy explains about Avocets and Stilts at his YouTube Channel which can be viewed at https://youtu.be/6iAI63sP6_Q?si=WVbmr3OiCsn1FV3y
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