CENTRAL MEXICO & BELIZE EXPEDITION
Tour Description


65 Day Tour:  Pharr (1 night), Monterrey (2), San Roberto (1), San Miguel de Allende (3), Pátzcuaro (3), Angangueo (2), Cuernavaca (4), Puebla (1), Oaxaca (6), Tehuantepec (3), San Cristóbal (3), Palenque (5), Chetumal (2), Western Highway (2), San Ignacio (3), Dangriga (5), Orange Walk (9 with side trip), Chetumal (1), Villahermosa (1), Catemaco (3), Veracruz (2), Costa Esmeralda (1), Tampico (1), Pharr.


ElPotosi.JPG (8754 bytes)We're tempted to say, "This trip has it all!" Our route certainly covers an expansive range of birding habitats: from Monterrey's Highrise in Northern Mexico, south to the high volcanic mountains of Angangueo (10 500 ft.), east to the Valley of Oaxaca, down to the Pacific coast at the Isthmus of Tehuantepec, then east to the Mayan ruins of Palenque, south to the birder's wonderland of Belize, and north along the Mexico's Gulf Coast.

We'll travel through the Sierra Madre Oriental mountains, starting our birding with a visit to the home of the Maroon-fronted Parrots in Cola de Caballocamera.GIF (1399 bytes). Climbing through the mountains, some towering above us at 12 500 ft., we'll see Cerro El Potosí and we'll seek Worthen's, Black-throated and Black-chinned sparrows. Then we'll travel the central plateau of Mexico until we thread our way to the famous Monarch Butterfly preserve high in pine-forested mountains. Imagine seeing tens of thousands of butterflies on a single tree camera.GIF (1399 bytes), and that tree surrounded by a forest of similarly arrayed trees. We should also see Green Violet-ears, Olive-backed Towhees, and Boucard's Wrens. Among the pine trees at Tecámbaro we've found Red Warblers, White-throated and Rufous-backed robins camera.GIF (1399 bytes), and in the same area, Blue Mockingbird. On our list for Coajomulco are Chestnut-sided Shrike-Vireos and Cinnamon-bellied Flowerpiercers, as are Orange-billed and Russet Nightingale-Thrushes, Colima Warblers and Striped sparrows camera.GIF (1399 bytes).  At Lerma marshes we can find Bicolored Blackbird and the endemic Black-polled Yellowthroat camera.GIF (1399 bytes).

RoWr01.jpg (9717 bytes)Next we travel to Oaxaca, where we spend leisurely time at this historic city in a valley surrounded by high peaks and excellent birding. camera.GIF (1399 bytes) We'll target Ocellated Thrasher, Beautiful Hummingbird and Oaxaca Sparrow. Only a few of us saw Aztec Thrush last trip, so we'll look harder this time now that we know where they hang out. We had an impressive 168 species in the Oaxaca area on a previous trip, so we look forward to revisiting this hot spot again and again. On the road once more, we'll reach the Pacific Ocean at the southern point of the Isthmus of Tehuantepec. Here we have found an impressive list of hard-to-get species, including: Pacific Screech-Owl, Rose-bellied Bunting, Orange-breasted Bunting, Cinnamon-tailed Sparrow, and Spot-breasted Oriole.  And we've  also seen an equally elusive species: Lesser Ground-Cuckoo, a bird with strange blue mascara-shaded eyes.

From the Pacific Ocean we head into the pine-oak mountains of Central Chiapas to San Cristóbal.  Birds found in this region include Ocellated Quail, Bearded Screech-Owl, Garnet-throated Hummingbird, Black-capped Swallows, Blue-and-white Mockingbird, Pink-headed Warbler and many others that we are unlikely to see elsewhere during our trip.  We'll be spending many days in another birding hotspot: the foothills of Palenque (one year's favorite was the tree full of Green Honeycreepers!) and the nearby Bonampak Maya ruins along the Guatemala border, where Band-backed Wrens nest in the bromeliads growing on tall trees and Purple-crowned Fairies dance between flowers.

The best is yet to come! Belize is a country birders cannot get enough of. Every visit offers many more opportunities to see life birds and on this tour we will spend 21 days in the marvelous birding paradise. And if it's your first visit, you will be amazed at the number of colorful new species you will encounter each day: Violet Sabrewing, White-necked Jacobin, Crimson-collared and Golden-hooded tanagers to name a few. An ever-popular boat trip takes us to the Lamanai ruins, buried in dense tropical jungle, and a return river trip at night to see Mottled and Stygian Owls, Yucatan Nightjar and Northern Potoo.

An all time favorite, our overnight stay in the Rio Bravo Conservation Area east of the Guatemala border, should give us great views of soaring King Vultures and, deep in the jungles, tantalizing looks at elusive lurkers such as Gray-throated Chat, Thrush-like Schiffornis and Stub-tailed Spadebill. When we are camped at San Ignacio we'll revisit infrequently birded Spanish Lookout which proved surprisingly bountiful in Belize rarities on our 2007 trip.  We'll also spend a day at Blue Hole National Park where on our last trip we watched a Tody Motmot calling.  From our campsite in Dangriga we'll be in close proximity to the best birding sites in the country.  A prize bird and the favorite of previous trips is the flock of Scarlet Macaws we watched south of Dangriga.  In 2007 we watched Black-and-white Owls and heard a Spectacled Owl at Mayflower Bocawina.  A few days later we spread out across Cockscomb Basin Wildlife Sanctuary and collectively identified 176 bird species between sunrise and noon.

On our return northward we'll stop at several sites in Veracruz, including Catemaco which proved very popular on prior trips.  We've heard of a new birding site there and hope to get even more species to the already long list of good birds in these coastal mountains.

Many extras included in our caravans

SanMiguel.jpg (11969 bytes)If you are a non-birding partner and think you may have little to do on this trip, think again. Our tour guide will see to it that our days and nights offer opportunities to shop the villages, dine at good restaurants, swim on sandy beaches and absorb the rich indigenous and Mexican history and culture. Our trek takes us through incredible scenery, fascinating Mayan ruins and beautiful beaches. Because this is a birding caravan, we see a Mexico not often seen by other tourists, but we also hit many of the traditional tourist spots.

We visit Mexico's most typical colonial village at San Miguel de Allende, a quaint town with cobblestone streets and an exciting central square surrounded by musicians, restaurants, and historic churches, beautifully illuminated at night. Our social director will lead us on a side trip to Guanajuato, a picturesque city of tunnels and lovely plazas.

Bon_art.jpg (13590 bytes)At Pátzcuaro, enjoy eating mole Poblano, followed by the historical regional Dance of the Old Men. The shopper will have plenty of time to browse as we visit some of the best areas available for Mexican crafts: hammered copperware in Pátzcuaro, silver jewelry in Taxco, green pottery and black pottery in Oaxaca, colorful rugs at Teotitlán del Valle, and the hand-worked embroidery of Mayans in Palenque.

Mayan ruins are a part of this trip also, with visits to Palenque, Monte Alban camera.GIF (1399 bytes), Oxtankah and Lamanai. We will see the magnificent color paintings on the temple walls of Bonampak, one of the most recently discovered Mayan ruins. Then there is the unusual Belize Zoo, the amazing jungle visit at the Jaguar Preserve, and on and on.

 

 


This web site is designed by Bert Frenz.
Copyright © 2007 Bert Frenz. All rights reserved.
Revised: July 04, 2007.