Day 296: On to Bohol

Scops-Owls and a Frogmouth at a butterfly conservation center on the island.

October 23, 2015: Bohol, Philippines 鈥&苍产蝉辫;By now I have my morning routine distilled to a science. Today I set an alarm for 3:43 a.m. in order to be out the door at 4. It takes me exactly 17 minutes to wake up, roll out of bed, pack everything, and head out to greet the day. No coffee necessary!

Nicky and I took an island-hopper flight to Bohol, a smallish island in the middle of the Philippines group. The flight was delayed (that鈥檚 4/4 so far this week), and we didn鈥檛 touch down until nearly lunchtime. Apparently a military C-130 showed up just before us, and Bohol鈥檚 airstrip can accommodate only one plane at a time, so we circled interminably until cleared to land.

Bohol has more than a million human residents and is popular among tourists for its beaches and resorts. Almost exactly two years ago it made the news for a 7.2 magnitude earthquake that rocked the island, but otherwise it鈥檚 a relaxed sort of place. The island鈥檚 interior is mostly forest and rice fields.

Nicky and I were met by a woman named Cristy Burlace, a New Zealand native who set up a butterfly conservation center on Bohol about 15 years ago. She now has about 30 employees and runs a restaurant along with the butterfly project; makes her own ice cream (called 鈥淢adame Butterfly鈥); and is attempting a captive-breeding project with the Philippine Tarsier, one of the world鈥檚 smallest primates. We鈥檒l spend two nights at this place, called 鈥淗abitat Bohol.鈥

As soon as we arrived, Christy dispatched us with one of her guides, who quietly showed us a pair of Everett鈥檚 Scops-Owls roosting in a dense tree on the property. Nicky and I then squeezed in a couple of solid hours of birding in a nearby patch of forest before dusk fell, and managed to spotlight a Philippine Frogmouth as it got dark. 

New birds today: 13

Year list: 4976

 

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