February 15, 2015, Oxampampa, Peru 鈥 Last night Gunnar, Carlos, Glenn and I drove past midnight into a remote part of central Peru, parked the van, reclined in our seats, and caught a few hours of uncomfortable rest. Gunnar wanted to be in this particular spot at dawn to find a bird called the Black-spectacled Brush-Finch, a super-endemic species first described about 15 years ago, which is easiest to see around daybreak. I woke up this morning to gunmetal skies and rain on the van鈥檚 roof. Carlos, who had slept in the driver鈥檚 seat, woke up a couple minutes later and discovered the van had a dead battery. What to do? We decided to sort it out later and the four of us went looking for the brush-finch on foot.
The rain came down in a steady, cold, penetrating drizzle, and we got soaked. The birds were quiet. Glenn suggested that they were all inside somewhere drinking hot chocolate, which sounded pretty good to us. It took an hour to find the brush-finches, but we eventually had great looks at a pair cavorting around the bushes.
Meanwhile, the van was parked between a waterfall and a precipice, and we couldn鈥檛 budge it to try a push start. Things were looking uncertain until a little white car turned up with a family of eight(!) sardined inside. Its driver, a man about five feet tall, didn鈥檛 have jumper cables but did have a screwdriver, and he managed to extract the batteries from both our vehicles and switch them, to charge our dead battery in his own car. That worked, and he drove off with the batteries still switched (鈥淚t doesn鈥檛 matter, they鈥檙e the same size!鈥 he said, cheerfully) while we continued with our birding itinerary, having lost only an hour.
Today鈥檚 route took us across an eastern flank of the Andes on a series of massively exposed one-lane roads (one of which, , was recently featured on a BBC TV program as one of the world鈥檚 most dangerous). We tracked down some wonderful birds: Gray-breasted Mountain-Toucan, Blue-banded Toucanet, Amazonian Umbrellabird, Flame-faced Tanager鈥ost of them were new for my year, and I survived to tell the tale.
New birds today: 48
Year list: 1073
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