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Birding on the Camino Madrid

Donna Sch

Veteran Member
Time of past OR future Camino
VdLP-Sanabres-Fisterra '15; Levante-Invierno '19
I'm an amateur birdnerd and I've just been looking at a list of endangered birds. The area between Tres Cantos and Segovia in particular seems to be a birding hotspot. Just wondering what people have seen.
I'm hoping to justify taking my real camera!
 

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...and ship it to Santiago for storage. You pick it up once in Santiago. Service offered by Casa Ivar (we use DHL for transportation).
I’m sorry I can’t help with that section of the Madrid, but last year I did see a flock of Great Bustards as I was walking towards Santervas (from Villalon de Campos). That was the third week of May. Impressive birds!
I'm so sorry you had this experience. Did these Bastards give you any trouble? Did they try to rob you? I recommend, for the next time, to call the Spanish version of 911. The other option is to lie flat on the ground and pretend you are dead; they, then, will probably show no interest. I hope the rest of your Camino is uneventful.. Chuck
 
3rd Edition. More content, training & pack guides avoid common mistakes, bed bugs etc
I am not a birder - but right after Tres Cantos (you walk down to a river that you follow for a good while) the bird song was amazing. I took out my phone and the Merlin (bird song identification) app and used it every day on that Camino (usually looking up the same songs over and over!). I did not keep a list or all the recordings on the app -- but I did keep a few of them, and here are some of the birds that Merlin identified (mid-April): nightingale, blackbird, short-toed treecreeper, european goldfinch, chaffinch, crested tit, coal tit, western bonelli's warbler, dunnock, skylark, corn bunting, calandra lark, cirl bunting, european robin....There definitely would have been others; I know I deleted some recordings. Others know better than I do how accurate the app is! The birds were one of my favourite things on the Madrid!
 
The focus is on reducing the risk of failure through being well prepared. 2nd ed.
I'm an amateur birdnerd and I've just been looking at a list of endangered birds. The area between Tres Cantos and Segovia in particular seems to be a birding hotspot. Just wondering what people have seen.
I'm hoping to justify taking my real camera!
It’s going to be dependent on when you’re walking. Lots of passage migrants in spring and autumn. All sorts wintering in the (sadly rapidly declining wetlands) summer season not a lot other than the finches and warblers and the cohorts of raptors that find them to be the perfect tapa.

I’d be more inclined to take a decent, light as possible, binocular. You’d need a heavy lens to get up close and personal.

Good luck and happy birding
 
I’m sorry I can’t help with that section of the Madrid, but last year I did see a flock of Great Bustards as I was walking towards Santervas (from Villalon de Campos). That was the third week of May. Impressive birds!
Just in case anyone needs acquainting with the song of the Great Bustard, or just needs cheering up on a dreary day, I recommend this informative video.
 
It’s going to be dependent on when you’re walking. Lots of passage migrants in spring and autumn. All sorts wintering in the (sadly rapidly declining wetlands) summer season not a lot other than the finches and warblers and the cohorts of raptors that find them to be the perfect tapa.
We will be on the Madrid in May and we are doing a slow camino.

I’d be more inclined to take a decent, light as possible, binocular. You’d need a heavy lens to get up close and personal.

Good luck and happy birding
I have the camera. Just trying to justify 2.4kg of camera stuff. My 100-500 lens is actually lighter than my 70-250. I need to load up my backpack and try it out. I can carry 13 kg comfortably in my Aarn pack so I figure I can keep the other stuff down to 6-7 kg, it is doable.
 

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Ideal sleeping bag liner whether we want to add a thermal plus to our bag, or if we want to use it alone to sleep in shelters or hostels. Thanks to its mummy shape, it adapts perfectly to our body.

€46,-
Ok. And if you’re in no rush: early mornings on or near any patch of damp you can find should offer opportunities. And, as you’ll know, the two hours into sunset anywhere there’s cover will be productive. Unfortunately that leaves you walking in the heat. Worth spending time on the maps and picking out targets.
 
Just in case anyone needs acquainting with the song of the Great Bustard, or just needs cheering up on a dreary day, I recommend this informative video
What a show, not even considering the sound effects!

My 100-500 lens is actually lighter than my 70-250
I have a compact Panasonic Lumix that has quite a decent 3O× optical zoom. Not as perfect as an SLR with a long lens, but quite respectable. And you don't have much to lug around.
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The one from Galicia (the round) and the one from Castilla & Leon. Individually numbered and made by the same people that make the ones you see on your walk.
Worth spending time on the maps and picking out targets.
I'm hitting up hotspots on ebird/iNaturalist already! If I have time I might whip up a summary doc and post it on the forum.
Just in case anyone needs acquainting with the song of the Great Bustard, or just needs cheering up on a dreary day, I recommend this informative video.
That is one bird call I will remember!
What a show, not even considering the sound effects!


I have a compact Panasonic Lumix that has quite a decent 3O× optical zoom. Not as perfect as an SLR with a long lens, but quite respectable. And you don't have much to lug around.
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My other half has ruined me as far as cameras go. He buys me stuff that I wouldn't even consider buying due to the expense. I don't look up the prices of what they are worth! I have a nice Nikon bridge camera which weighs about 1 kg but I rarely use it as the quality of the photos doesn't compare (and the batteries run out in no time due to the motorised lens). So I'm willing to consider the extra weight.
I suspect he will take his Olympus. That is an excellent travel camera, very well designed and so much lighter than his Nikon set up. Here's a brolga I spotted a couple of weeks ago taken with my Canon.
 

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