The Birdlife of Simien Lodge 

Raven

Photo: Thick billed Raven

Over eighty species of bird have been recorded in the immediate area of Simien Lodge, but this total will undoubtedly continue to grow as more ornithologists and wildlife enthusiasts come to visit the Simien Mountains National Park and UNESCO World Heritage Site. Certainly this checklist can be expected to surpass the 100 mark in the very near future, and may even double in due course. Migration periods, in spring mostly during March and April, and in the autumn, from September to December, are when most new records are likely. Please add your records to the checklist below, together with the date, or tell staff at the Lodge or your guide of any interesting sightings you may happen to make.  

Of at least 30 endemic species of bird present in Ethiopia, no fewer than 12 can be seen on foot within a kilometre of the Simien Lodge. An endemic species is one found nowhere else in the world. These are marked with an asterisk in the checklist. A further ten of these Ethiopian endemics species occur elsewhere in the National Park, at lower or higher altitudes. Some thirteen of the thirty species listed also occur into Eritrea. Up to a further nine species may subsequently be recognized - described as new to science – from within Ethiopia, two of these, namely Ethiopian Cisticola and Erlanger’s Lark (marked with +), occur respectively at and near Simien Lodge. A feather from an Abyssinian Long-eared Owl, another probable endemic species, was found near the Lodge but, frustratingly, the bird could not be located. Shelterbelts of eucalyptus or lichen-festooned tree heaths would be likely places to look for a roosting individual.

A self-guided nature trail just 600 metres long (1200m return) is one recommended walk for visiting naturalists. This is down the valley to the south-west below the Lodge. Follow the stream-side down until you reach the villagers’ fields marked by a hedge of tall Eucalypts. This is just 600 m below the Lodge. Five hundred metres downhill is a small fenced grazing exclosure – compare the vegetation inside and outside this plot and you will understand the impact of livestock grazing in the park. Weave your way back up hill through the Tree Heaths and Tree St. John’s Wort, and admire the endemic Abyssinian Roses. Typical birds you can expect to find along the way are Wattled Ibis, Brown-rumped and Streaky Serins, Dusky Turtle Doves and Chiffchaff (winter only). You may also find White-backed Black Tit, Brown Woodland Warbler and Abyssinian Slaty Flycatcher, or be lucky enough to locate the pair of unobtrusive Abyssinian Woodpeckers that glean food from lichens in the tree heaths here. Almost certainly you will hear cinnamon bracken warbler, although this skulking species is often difficult if not impossible to see. Try waiting patiently by the thick bushes around the spring below the tacos. Speckled Doves, Fiscal Shrike, both serins and Abyssinian Cisticola will keep you company here.

 

Don’t forget to watch overhead for birds of prey – with eighteen species recorded to date, including several species of vulture and Tawny Eagles, the sky is rarely empty for long, if at all. Fan-tailed Ravens cavort and tumble entertainingly whilst that remarkable Ethiopian speciality, Thick-billed Raven, prefers to loaf near the Lodge and scavenge noisily and boldly for kitchen scraps. Lammergeier is a garden bird at the Lodge which is quite possibly the best place in the world to get point blank views of this the dramatic and much sought-after ‘Bonebreaker’.

Photo: The Lammergayer is often confused with the eagle family but it is in fact a vulture.

Two other particular locations need mentioning here:

Ankober Serin – a special Ethiopian bird

The first site is one nearby the Lodge where it is possible to see the Ankober Serin. This endemic species, which has a predilection to live on the rock face at the top of the often foggy escarpment, perhaps then hardly surprisingly, was only newly described to science following its discovery in 1979. This was near the village of Ankober in southern Ethiopia. Since that time it has been found in at least three other localities, including very recently (from 1997) in Simien itself. The site near Simien Lodge is one such new site, but one needs to go to the precise spot to sit and watch and wait for birds to arrive. The site is just 960m from the Lodge (as the raven flies) at the escarpment edge which you come to at the top end of the open rose-filled valley to the east. The GPS coordinates of a safe lookout point are 13.12.35N 37.59.17E. The site can be recognized in being a rather bare and crumbly basalt face below and across a relatively narrow cleft from the observation point. Ruppell’s Chat also occurs here (as well as by the river and falls a few kilometres outside the park entrance). Menelik’s Bushbuck has been seen coming to drink from pools near the roadside before the zigzag climb back up to the Lodge.

The Escarpment Edge

The second area recommended for a profitable hour or two is the escarpment edge itself. Try anywhere north of the Lodge where there is an uninterrupted view of the spectacular scenery. Find a comfortable rock where the view meets this description and watch for birds of prey above and below you. Bands of Gelada Baboons may view you with amusement rather than the other way round. Apart from birds of prey, other species to watch out for are White-collared Pigeon, White-winged Cliffchat, Abyssinian Catbird (which has a loud and beautiful song although usually delivered out of sight from thick cover of roses or other broadleaves) and pairs of White-backed Black Tit, all four being endemic species. Parties of Erckel’s Francolin may also be disturbed at the escarpment. Pay special attention if the gelada start alarming, as, if you are lucky, a Simien Wolf may be wandering by.

   
Checklist of the Birds of Simian Lodge

1 Abdim’s Stork 41 Yellow Wagtail 81 African Citril Finch
2 *Wattled Ibis 42 Pied Wagtail 82 Yellow-fronted Canary
3 Montagu’s Harrier 43 Grey Wagtail 83 *Black-headed Siskin
4 Yellow-billed Kite 44 Black-eared Wheatear 84  
5 Lammergeier 45 Botta’s Wheatear 85  
6 Egyptian Vulture 46 *White-winged Cliffchat 86  
7 Brown Snake Eagle 47 Pied Wheatear 87  
8 Verreaux’s Eagle 48 African Stonechat 88  
9 Ruppell’s Griffon Vulture 49 *Ruppell’s Chat 89  
10 Lappet-faced Vulture 50 Alpine Chat 90  
11 Hooded Vulture 51 Blue Rock Thrush 91  
12 Black Goshawk 52 Groundscraper Thrush 92  
13 African Goshawk 53 Cinnamon Bracken Warbler 93  
14 Red-breasted Sparrowhawk 54 Chiffchaff 94  
15 Augur Buzzard 55 Brown Woodland Warbler 95  
16 Tawny Eagle 56 +Abyssinian Cisticola 96  
17 Common Kestrel 57 Brown Parisoma 97  
18 Lanner Falcon 58 *Abyssinian Catbird 98  
19 Saker Falcon 59 *Abyssinian Slaty Flycatcher 99  
20 Peregrine Falcon 60 Pale Flycatcher 100  
21 Erckel’s Francolin 61 Gambaga Flycatcher 101  
22 Green Sandpiper 62 White-rumped Babbler 102  
23 Speckled Pigeon 63 *White-billed Starling 103  
24 *White-collared Pigeon 64 *White-backed Black Tit 104  
25 Dusky Turtle Dove 65 Montane White-eye 105  
26 +Abyssinian Long-eared Owl 66 Abyssinian White-eye 106  
27 Alpine Swift 67 Variable Sunbird 107  
28 Nyanza Swift 68 Scarlet-chested Sunbird 108  
29 Hemprich’s Hornbill 69 Tacazze Sunbird 109  
30 *Abyssinian Woodpecker 70 Fiscal Shrike 110  
31 Thekla Lark 71 Red-billed Chough 111  
32 Short-toed Lark 72 Cape Crow (Cape Rook) 112  
33 +Erlanger’s Lark 73 Pied Crow 113  
34 Barn Swallow 74 *Thick-billed Raven 114  
35 Red-rumped Swallow 75 Fan-tailed Raven 115  
36 African Rock Martin 76 Grey-headed Sparrow 116  
37 House Martin 77 Baglafecht Weaver 117  
38 Grassveld Pipit 78 *Ankober Serin 118  
39 Red-throated Pipit 79 Streaky Serin 119  
40 Plain-backed Pipit 80 Brown-rumped Serin 120  
 
 

 

Other endemic bird reported from elsewhere in Simien Mountains NP

1 *Blue-winged Goose 6 *Abyssinian Longclaw
2 *Spot-breasted Lapwing 7 *Banded Barbet
3 *Rouget’s Rail 8 *Ruppell’s Robin-Chat
4 *Black-winged Lovebird 9 *Black-headed Forest Oriole
5 *Yellow-fronted Parrot 10 *White-throated Serin

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