Visit your favourite destinations
Western Europe
North America
Caribbean
Africa
Asia
Eastern Europe
South America
Australasia
Middle East
East Indies

The Following Reports are available from The Gambia:
Why not send us a report, or an update to one of your current reports?

               
     


The Gambia 4th to 18th November 2010

  • Modou was soon pointing out a steady stream of raptors including adult Bateleur, two African Hawk Eagles, a Banded Snake-Eagle, two Brown Snake-Eagles and a Long-crested Eagle...Mike and Olly Fox report.

The Gambia 18-25th November 2008

  • Moving on we hit another purple patch, finding both African Paradise Flycatcher, and Hybrid Red-bellied X African Paradise Flycatcher, along with Snowy-crowned Robin-chat, African Thrush, Grey-headed Bristlebill, Yellow-breasted Apolis, Common Wattle-eye, and Little Greenbul....Ray Thorneycroft reports

The Gambia Nov 2008

  • A recent trip to the Gambia with my wife Jill, was to be a holiday taking in the sun and adding a little birding along the way...Terry Bentley reports

Gambia 11-18th Dec 07

  • The highlight of Abuko for me was seeing a Malachite Kingfisher near to the main pond, two Hammerkops and Green and Violet Turaco’s. Ebrima seemed more excited by a sighting of a Western Bluebill...Jan Foulkes reports.

Gambia October-November 2007

  • The thing that struck about Kau-ur was the shear number of birds, mainly waders. Wattled and Spur-winged Plovers in profusion, hundreds of Collared Pratincoles and a single Little Stint. Although I’d had very little contact with Pratincoles in the past, they might as well have been Dunlins. It was the little steel grey and peach jobs running between them that got my attention; Egyptian Plover, about a dozen of them....John Armstrong reports.

Visiting Gambia Nov 07

  • An late afternoon walk around the camp produced Abyssinian roller, several yellow-billed shrikes, black flycatcher, Senegal coucal, fruit doves and fork-tailed drongo...Phil Stidwill reports

The Gambia 6-13th February 2007

  • First bird Palm-nut vulture seen from plane! From runway lots of hooded vultures, a few black kites and several flocks of speckled pigeons. A few cattle egrets feeding on the grassy verges..Ian Higginson reports

The Gambia 27th Nov - 4th Dec 2006

  • I made my first visit to The Gambia in February 2003 with Steve Scott [report on Birdtours website] and really enjoyed my first experience of an African country. Since that time, I have been to South Africa and Kenya but retain a soft spot for The Gambia...Bob Biggs reports

The Gambia August 22nd - September 3rd 2006

  • Birding the hard way: rainy season, public transport, no bird guides....Sander Bot reports.

Gambia 28th February - 14th March 2006

  • As a whole, I found the Gambia and its birds an experience I will never forget, from the excellent Senegambia Beach Hotel down to the smiling, happy children who followed us everywhere. It is an experience I hope to repeat next year....Graham Masters reports

Gambia (with Halcyon) February 2007

  • We resumed our search for new birds, with any movement catching the eye, and saw a Zitting Cisticola and a Tawny-flanked Prinia as well as a Fork-tailed Drongo perched on a low palm, the unmistakeable tail backlit against the palm leaf. A Lizard Buzzard was high in an Oil Palm

Gambia 20 Dec 05-03 Jan 06

  • This was my second visit to the Gambia following an “up-river” trip on a boat in March 2003 with the Army Ornithological Society (AOS).  This had proved to be an excellent trip and introduction to African birding...Mark Easterbrook reports

Gambia:1st - 15th; December 2005

  • Although we stayed at the Atlantic Hotel Banjul, which was away from the main birding accommodation i.e. The Senegambia Hotel area, the discovery of Palm Grove Lagoon as a excellent area for watching Terns and Waders was a major advantage. The Atlantic Hotel Grounds held many species and also was a watch point for overflys across the river....Derek & Lynne Lister report

Gambia 06 – 20th January 2005

  • My wife and I spent a wonderfully relaxing fortnight in the Gambia last January, so good we’re going back again...Robin Hadley reports

Hooded Vulture

Gambia 26th Nov ~ 10th Dec 2004

  • We chose Gambia as our first birding destination to Africa, based mainly on great reports given by others who had visited the area. It was a difficult choice given the range of fantastic birding destinations in Africa from South Africa to Morocco. However we thought that The Gambia offered such a diverse range of species that it would be the ideal place to start...Marcus Ward reports.

The Gambia January 16th – 23rd 2004 

  • My wife Maryan and I spent one week in The Gambia in early 2004 for some winter sun and a little bird watching. We were very impressed by the country, its people and the wonderful array of birdlife. We definitely will return....Robin Hadley reports.

The Gambia 28th November – 12th December 2003

  • My wife, Sandra, and I spent two weeks in The Gambia in late 2003, our first visit to Africa, so we anticipated seeing a considerable number of species that we had not seen before.  We were not disappointed - lots of good views of wonderful birds, some great people and, by visiting sights away from the coastal strip, an insight into rural Africa....Julian Hughes reports

The Gambia Oct 24 - Nov 4 2003

  • My quandary as a keen birder with a non-birding spouse and two non-birding sons, is to arrange family holidays that allow me to indulge my birding passion without impinging too much on the sun, sea and sightseeing pleasures of my ever tolerant family....So where next to follow a destination like Disneyworld? How about somewhere completely different? how about Africa?...Steve Baines reports.

The Gambia 30 January - 6th February 03

  • I don't want to start off by boring everyone but if you knew me, you wouldn't believe that I would ever contemplate a trip to Africa.  I've been ill in Spain, Portugal, the Canaries, Torquay.you name it.  However, for a "treat" ahead of my 50th birthday in March 2003, I allowed myself a moment of madness last March, to the concern of all of my family, and booked a week in the Gambia...Bob Biggs reports

The Gambia  03-17 January 2003

  • In two weeks, we saw approximately 260 species, more than 215 of them life birds.  Although we missed a couple of species we had anticipated seeing, we also saw several, such as African Finfoot, that we had scarcely dared dream we might see... Cathy McFadden reports. 

 

For lots of pre 2003 reports click here

 

 




   
           
           
           
           
           
           
               

Why not send us a report, or an update to one of your current reports?

Some Useful bird books for The Gambia:
Do you have a good book for this region that we haven't featured? let us know

     
   

Birds of Senegal and The Gambia (Helm Field Guides)
Nik Borrow et al: Amazon.co.uk or Amazon.com

  • If you are planning a holiday to that part of West Africa then do consider this guide even if you've never been a regular bird-watcher. There are so many beautiful and unusual birds - even in hotel gardens - you'll want to be able to identify them and this guide is perfect. Wonderful, accurate illustrations and bags of interesting detail.

A Field Guide to the Birds of the Gambia and Senegal
Clive Barlow, Tony Disley: Buy from Amazon.co.uk or Amazon.com

  • This field guide covers the area of the Gambia, a country which is very popular with a large number of birders. The Gambia shelters many migrants from the Western Palaearctic, from September to April, as well as having a significant list of resident West African birds. The guide also covers Senegal, which almost entirely surrounds The Gambia...

The Birds of Western Africa
Nik Borrow, Ron Demey: Buy from Amazon.com or Amazon.co.uk

  • A major new fieldguide, and a classic from the "Helm" stable that will set the standard for Western Africa for years to come. It covers all the 1282 species expected to be seen in the c.20 nations inside a triangle enclosing The Congo, Chad and Mauritania. For several of the countries it is the only single guide that covers all of the nations birds in one book. Nicely illustrated with over 3000 drawings on 142 colour plates which cover all the species described apart from a few vagrants. Distribution maps are provided for the majority of species. As the first comprehensive guide to the region in over 25 years this is a "must buy" for any serious birder visiting Western Africa. Now available in Paperback

Birds of Africa
Chris Stuart, Tilde Stuart: Buy from Amazon.co.uk or Amazon.com

  • A comprehensive account of the birds of Africa. The text covers all the avifaunal families that occur in Africa, discusses the species that occur within each family, and provides representative examples of each family in depth. Also included is a general introduction to the major avifaunal regions of Africa.

Where to Watch Birds in Africa
Nigel Wheatley: Buy from Amazon.com or Amazon.co.uk

  • One of a series of guides devoted to birdwatching, this book contains site accounts, plans, maps, lists of birds in the regions and advice on planning bird-watching trips. It deals with over 200 sites in detail, and mentions many others. Each country is covered alphabetically, including archipelagos and isolated islands off the African mainland, for example, the Azores. Bird lists are included under the headings "Endemics", "Specialities", "Others" and also "Other Wildlife", if relevant. Access details are given, often with detailed site maps. The emphasis of the book is "bird finding", that is, where to go for the "best" species.

Travel books for the Gambia:

The Rough Guide to West Africa
Richard Trillo, Jim Hudgens: Buy from Amazon.com or Amazon.co.uk

  • This is a marvellous guide to the region, packed with hard-nosed advice and information, streets ahead of any other travel guide.

http://www.pass4-sure.us/HP2-Z30-dumps.html
http://www.mybraindumps.net/NS0-504.html
https://www.apple.com/
http://www.test-king.com/exams/HP0-S36.htm
http://www.actualtests.com/exam-350-080.htm

   
Search Now:
 


More Books... Click Here

External Links:
Click Here to Submit your own page to the external links section

Green Corner Birding

West African Bird Studies Association (WABSA).


Why not send us a report, or an update to one of your current reports?