Nature
Travel Specialists
nature,
wildife, adventure and general travel
Birding

As birding travel is a style of wildlife tour pretty
much unto itself, we thought we'd devote a few pages just to it. This
page is for those among us who don't think it's strange to be looking
the other way at the Taj Mahal (at least for a while) because there's
a house crow across the road, or consider that spending a few days
at a lodge where there's no TV, no nightlife nearby, and
the
only thing to do is to get up early and look at both beautiful and
brown birds seems a good thing. That's not to say that birds aren't
an important component of all of our natural history trips, but if
you're traveling to one of our destinations just to bird, these are
your pages. (For this reason the pages, and images, will take a bit
longer to download - we didn't compress them as much, so they are
clearer)
Nature Travel Specialists does not operate birding
tours, but we
do know which ones may suit you best, and we know our birds pretty
well (our Director, Andrew Haffenden, has personally seen over two-thirds
of Australia's, and conducted field research on magpie geese, brolgas
and sarus cranes there for many years. That's him on the right with
Dyak headman on the Upper Mahakam River, Borneo, the day after having
two groups of white-shouldered
ibis). We also recognize that many birders like to organize their
own travel, so we have included lots of links to companies and accommodations
that you can contact directly. If there's anything we can do for you
along the way - there's lots of aspects of comfortable and successful
travel other than just booking tours and hotels - we'd be happy to
so. If not, that's fine too; please explore these links, contact the
companies, and good birding. We won't mind, however, if you tell the
people you're booking with where you found them.
While we're on the subject, if you haven't already
been there, visit the Worldtwitch
site. It's one of our our favorites for up to date world-wide birding
information, book and equipment reviews, field reports, birding links,
and general, sometimes delightfully ascerbic, comments. Other good
sites are also included throughout as links. It's pretty much oriented
towards the heavy lister, however. Another favorite, and less listing-oriented,
site with even more information than Worldtwitch is Fatbirder.
There's not much to do with birding that can't be found here. They
also have good information regarding disabled birding and natural
history travel (and a funnies section). Birdforum
is a free membeship bird forum site, with thousands upon thousands
of relevant posts on all bird topics, and parts of the world, from
ID to where to find to computer programs, digiscoping and pretty much
everything.
For birding in Chile, please go to our Chile
birding with Fantastico Sur pages.
Peregrine Birding Tours, an Australian birding company, offers tours
all over the world. The owner, Chris Doughty, wrote the book on Pacific
birding - See our Peregrine Birding
Tours page here.
We also support local birders who organize regular pelagic trips
into the Gulf of Mexico from Destin, Florida. Please have a look at
our Pelagic birding
pages for more information.