Lying on the Arabian Sea well within the Tropic of Cancer and approximately 250 miles south of Bombay, India, the restful haven of Goa offers balmy seas, cloudless blue skies, endless white sand beaches fringed with palms, and stunning sunsets coupled with a novel blend of European culture and Indian ambience.
Goa is also a birdwatcher’s paradise with many excellent habitats: wide river estuaries, mangrove swamps, marshes, scrub-covered hillsides, arid fields, rich forest reserves at the foot of the majestic Western Ghats and a spectacular bird-thronged lake at Carambolim. We’ll explore most of Goa’s major birding sites and familiarize ourselves with a wide selection of its birds. We’ll encounter many species endemic to peninsular and south India as well as a large number of wintering species from farther north and more widespread Asian birds.
Wonderful birds, a sub-tropical environment, delicious food and the easygoing Goan lifestyle: it’s almost too good to be true.
Day 1: The tour begins this evening in Goa.
Day 2: After an introductory meeting, we’ll spend the rest of the day getting to know some of the common birds close to our hotel. These should include the ever-present Brahminy and Black Kites, Indian Pond Herons, Eastern Cattle Egrets, Indian Rollers and Black Drongos. Blyth’s Reed Warblers and striking Black-rumped Flamebacks are common and we are bound to encounter both. Night in northern Goa.
Goa was excellent and Paul Holt’s leadership is among the very best. He was knowledgeable, considerate, patient and totally committed to the participants' well-being. - Chris D.
Days 3-12: We’ll spend these days getting to know Goa and its birds. A small marsh not very far from our hotel can hold a fine selection of birds and if the rains have been good we can look for Cinnamon and Black Bitterns, Greater Painted-Snipe, Black-winged Stilt, Marsh Sandpiper, Small Pratincole, Red-wattled Lapwing, Pacific Golden-Plover, Pintail Snipe, White-breasted Waterhen, Watercock, Slaty-breasted Rail, Ruddy-breasted and Baillon’s Crakes, Rosy Starling, White-breasted and Pied Kingfishers, and a host of smaller birds including Malabar Crested Lark, and Blyth’s, Richard’s and Paddyfield Pipits. Elsewhere, common birds we can expect to find include dazzling Little Green Bee-eater, Asian Koel, Long-tailed Shrike, Indian Robin, Wire-tailed Swallow, Ashy Wood-swallow and Green Warbler, while an Oriental Honey-buzzard or White-bellied Sea Eagle may drift overhead.
On some days, we’ll leave the coast and head inland to explore the forests of the Western Ghats. We’ll visit Bhagwan Mahaveer Wildlife Sanctuary (Mollem), not far from the village of Dhargem which boasts a Hindu temple dating back to the 11th century. The mixture of woodland, paddies, and small fields here offer a wonderful selection of birds. We’ll search the undergrowth for a star of the region, the jewel-like Indian Pitta, and may also come across a stunning Orange-headed Thrush, or a White-rumped Shama. The latter is arguably among the best songsters in the world. Among the open woodland and bamboo groves we’ll hope to find such charismatic species as Grey Junglefowl, White-bellied and Heart-spotted Woodpeckers, Malabar Pied Hornbill, Grey-fronted Green Pigeon, Velvet-fronted Nuthatch, Greater Racket-tailed Drongo, Black-naped Oriole, and Malabar Whistling Thrush.
We may find ourselves in the middle of a mixed feeding flock full of such gems as Yellow-browed, Grey-headed, and Flame-throated Bulbuls - this last stunning species being Goa’s state bird. These in turn may be joined by the equally stunning Asian Fairy Bluebird, Dark-fronted Babbler, Asian Paradise-flycatcher, White-bellied Blue Flycatcher or Indian Blue Robin. The birding does not stop when night falls either and we’ll go out at least once after dark (or before light) in the hope of finding Oriental and Indian Scops Owls, Brown Fish-owl and, with luck, Spot-bellied Eagle Owl. However, perhaps the star of any nocturnal birding will be the strange Sri Lanka Frogmouth whose equally strange, eerie grating call is so distinctive.
On other days we’ll visit Bondla Wildlife Sanctuary where many of these same birds can be found with some - the relatively rare White-bellied Blue Flycatcher and Forest Wagtail for example - in better numbers than at Mollem.
There is no fixed itinerary; instead Paul will use his knowledge of the area to decide each day how and where the excursions will run. At the same time he’ll ensure that all the main birding habitats in Goa are visited - some of them several times. All the sites are within a comfortable two hour’s drive from our hotel and most are much less.
Sites that we’ll visit will include the Baga fields; Fort Aguada (where we’ll look for Indian Peafowl, Sykes’s Warbler and Blue Rock Thrush); Fort Tiracol for the elusive Jungle Bush-quail; Candolim marsh, the Nerul bridge and the Santa Cruz pools and paddies for shorebirds; Dona Paula and Neura for arid grassland species such as Yellow-wattled Lapwing and Ashy-crowned Finch-lark; Mayem lake; Tikanem, Chorao and Divar Islands for Lesser Adjutants and Carambolim lake, and Bondla Wildlife Sanctuary. We will also spend part of one day sightseeing in Old Goa.
While we won’t be frequenting Goa’s famous (and often crowded) white sand beaches, we will visit one in particular, Morjim at the mouth of the Chapora River. It’s relatively quiet and normally holds thousands of gulls and terns. We will visit this beautiful site at least twice and hope to see up to six species of gulls, including several impressive Great Black-headed Gulls, and perhaps as many as nine or ten tern species, including both Lesser and Great Crested. Both Brahminy Starlings and Barred Buttonquail are occasionally found here, and the river mouth also holds a large gathering of shorebirds, including large numbers of Greater and Lesser Sandplovers, a few Terek Sandpipers and Common Redshanks, and a smattering of less common species such as Great Knot and at least in 2016 Crab-Plover. On one day we’ll travel by boat to the backwaters and creeks of one of the State’s larger rivers where we hope to encounter the endemic Goan subspecies of Collared Kingfisher as well as Woolly-necked Stork and the aptly named Mugger Crocodile.
We’ll visit a harrier roost that contains good numbers of ghostly Pallid Harriers, while Booted Eagle and both Greater and Indian Spotted Eagles are fairly common. We also have several reasonably reliable sites for Black, Rufous-bellied and Crested Hawk-eagles.
For non-birders Goa offers a great variety of activities and entertainment. This lively, friendly resort has numerous shops, restaurants and bars as well as abundant sunshine, sandy beaches and varied sightseeing opportunities. A variety of optional sightseeing trips are included, one of them out to the former Portuguese capital at Old Goa, which in its fifteenth-century heyday was the largest and richest city in the whole of Asia and whose a population then exceeded that of London! There is also the chance to visit some of the local markets. Nights in northern Goa.
Day 13: The tour ends this morning in Goa.
Note: The information presented here is an abbreviated version of our formal General Information for Tours to Goa. Its purpose is solely to give readers a sense of what might be involved if they take this tour. Although we do our best to make sure that what follows is completely accurate, it should not be used as a replacement for the formal document sent to all tour registrants, whose contents supersedes any information contained here.
ENTERING INDIA: United States citizens will need a passport, valid for 6 months beyond date of visa application, at least two blank pages, and a valid Indian visa to enter and exit India. Citizens of other nations should contact the nearest Indian Consulate for entry requirements. U.S. citizens seeking to enter India solely for tourist purposes, and who plan to stay no longer than 60 days, may apply for an electronic travel authorization at least four days prior to their arrival in lieu of applying for a tourist visa at an Indian embassy or consulate. Please visit https://indianvisaonline.gov.in/evisa/tvoa.html for additional information regarding the eligibilities and requirements for this type of visa.
For the most current information on entry and exit requirements, please visit the website of the Embassy of India in Washington, DC: https://www.indianembassyusa.gov.in/pages/NzU or call (202) 939-9865; or contact the Indian Consulates in Chicago, New York, San Francisco, Atlanta, or Houston.
COUNTRY INFORMATION:
You can review the U.S. Department of State Country Specific Travel Information at https://travel.state.gov/content/travel/en/international-travel/International-Travel-Country-Information-Pages/India.html, and the CIA World Factbook background notes on India at https://www.cia.gov/the-world-factbook/countries/india/.
Review foreign travel advice from the UK government here: https://www.gov.uk/foreign-travel-advice and travel advice and advisories from the Government of Canada here: https://travel.gc.ca/travelling/advisories
PACE OF TOUR: We will start early most days as birds are most active in the early morning. We won’t have a fixed itinerary and instead our leader will use his knowledge of the area to decide each day how and where the daily excursions will run. At the same time, he will ensure that all the main birding habitats in Goa are visited - some of them several times. The aim will be for the excursions to be good fun, at a relaxed pace, and with the accent on obtaining good views of the birds. We will have very few breakfasts at our own hotel preferring instead to head off birding for a few hours before having breakfast elsewhere. On occasions this will mean leaving the hotel between 05:45 and 06:30 and not having breakfast until 09:30. On at least several occasions, we will head inland to the base of the Western Ghats. This involves a drive of two hours or more and we will start early – perhaps as early as 04:30. On these days we will have picnic breakfasts in the field.
On a number of days we will return to our hotel for a break during the heat of the day and most days we aim to be back at our hotel before dusk. We usually manage to have about a one hour break before dinner. There may be one or two days when we get back after dusk and we may therefore require a shorter break before dinner. We will have dinner together each evening and complete our checklist at that time.
This is a relatively easy-going tour and while a couple of the days will be long and tiring many will not. Moreover none of the walks are particularly strenuous. On most days we will be bird- watching from poorly used, paved roads. While most of our walks will be of one or two hours in duration some will be longer, and when we visit Bondla Wildlife sanctuary in the Western Ghats we expect to spend all morning walking slowly down the park’s approach road. We will cover a distance of perhaps four kilometres with the vehicles catching us up at intervals of between one and two hours. Many of these walks will be flat and over good terrain but we don’t anticipate doing any strenuous uphill walking. On a couple of occasions, we will walk through the fields immediately behind our hotel, in years where the monsoon has been particularly substantial these fields will be damp underfoot. We will explore other areas if we consider this area is too wet.
All the sites that we visit in Goa are at a low altitude – none are above 400 meters (1300 feet).
HEALTH: The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) recommends that all travelers be up to date on routine vaccinations. These include measles-mumps-rubella (MMR) vaccine, diphtheria-tetanus-pertussis vaccine, varicella (chickenpox) vaccine, polio vaccine, and your yearly flu shot.
They further recommend that most travelers have protection against Hepatitis A and Typhoid, the latter being particularly important because of the presence in this region of S. typhi strains resistant to multiple antibiotics.
Malaria: The CDC currently recommends a malaria preventative. Please note that Chloroquine is not an effective antimalarial drug in India. Please consult your physician for the appropriate preventative.
The most current information about travelers’ health recommendations can be found on the CDC’s Travel Health website at https://wwwnc.cdc.gov/travel/destinations/traveler/none/india.
Water: Tap water is not safe to drink and should be avoided at all times. Bottled water (which the leader provides at mealtimes), soft drinks and beer are widely available. Do not eat any salads or unpeeled fruit.
Mild upset stomachs, often brought on simply by a change of diet, can be hard to avoid in India. We suggest bringing anti-diarrhoea medicine such as Imodium. Gatorade or other electrolyte-replacement drinks in powder form are also worth bringing as they replace the vital salts and minerals lost during a bout of diarrhoea.
Insects: Biting insects are not numerous but may occur locally particularly along the streams at Molem and Bondla: insect repellent will provide adequate protection.
Smoking: Smoking is prohibited in the vehicles or when the group is gathered for meals, checklists, etc. If you are sharing a room with a non-smoker, please do not smoke in the room. If you smoke in the field, do so well away and downwind from the group. If any location where the group is gathered has a stricter policy than the WINGS policy, that stricter policy will prevail.
CLIMATE: Goa is hot. Mid-day temperatures between November and the end of February are frequently around the high 80s° F-mid 90s° F, and its coastal location Goa is very humid. Any rain that does fall is usually as a brief convectional thunderstorm lasting only a few minutes. Rainwear is hardly necessary on this tour.
Night-time temperatures hardly ever drop below a comfortable 65° F. Arabian Sea temperatures are similar to those of the Mediterranean in summer. All our hotel rooms on the coast have ceiling fans and air conditioning units and can be kept comfortably cool.
Away from the coast, particularly around Molem and Bondla, night-time temperatures are a few degrees cooler, though it can still be quite hot around mid-day. Most birds and bird-watchers tend to be active in the early morning and again in the afternoon. Birdwatching around mid-day is seldom very productive and we would suggest taking a break then.
ACCOMMODATION: We stay at just one place during the tour; a small modern hotel with air-conditioned rooms and all the usual facilities such as a swimming pool.
Internet and Mobile Phone Use Our hotel has a reasonably good free WiFi connection. Mobile phone access can be intermittent when in the field.
FOOD: Throughout the tour we are served a wide variety of good quality Indian food. Salads or garnishes are frequently offered but these should always be declined or left on the edge of your plate. The food we are offered always includes a good selection of vegetarian dishes. We will eat most of our main meals in our hotel where we will order for ourselves from a menu, and have some breakfasts and lunches elsewhere.
We appreciate that not everyone likes to eat Indian food (which can occasionally be a little bit spicy) every day or even at all. Almost all of the places we visit can provide western food.
Vegetarians can be catered for easily in India, although it can be a little bit more awkward if you cannot eat curries. There is usually plenty of fish on the restaurant menu.
Drinks: Bottled water, a soft drink or a beer (or wine if appropriate) are provided at meals, as is coffee or tea. In addition we keep a supply of bottled water on the tour vehicles. Bottled or filtered water may also be provided in some rooms where we stay.
Food Allergies/Requirements: We cannot guarantee that all food allergies can be accommodated at every destination. Participants with significant food allergies or special dietary requirements should bring appropriate foods with them for those times when their needs cannot be met. Announced meal times are always approximate depending on how the day unfolds. Participants who need to eat according to a fixed schedule should bring supplemental food. Please contact the WINGS office if you have any questions.
TRANSPORT: We will use a fleet of taxis for the daily field trips. These taxis can negotiate coastal Goa’s narrow streets better than a tour bus and offer greater flexibility in that anyone wishing to return to the hotel early can usually do so. Participants should be able and willing to ride in any seat in our “tour vehicles”.
We advertise our Goa tour as a relatively relaxed, comfortable introduction to India…and it can be exactly that. With a remarkable 11 consecutive nights in the same hotel, it’s pretty stress free. (I’ve often wondered how many bird tours stay in the same hotel for this length of time – surely very, very few?). With the comfortable, well-appointed rooms, the clean swimming pool, the great food, and superbly friendly, attentive service it was even more remarkable that we did as much birding as we did! Combining these comforts with Goa’s gorgeous weather and birds galore once again made for a fabulously successful tour.
The tour started well with various on-time flights to the balmy haven of Goa on India’s west coast. We met our drivers (Raymon, Maurice and Santosh) on our first morning and these three gents would escort us around their home state for the duration of the tour. They were superb and had clearly mastered the (considerable) hazards of Indian roads and were as entertaining and enthusiastic as ever. Not content with just chauffeuring us from ‘a’ to ‘b’ they also excelled at pointing out quality birds! How many of us would have found the day-time roosting Brown Hawk-owl near Carambolim or the Indian Jungle Nightjar at Mayem without their help? I certainly wouldn’t have!
The first of our many optional excursions was to a small wetland not far from our comfortable hotel in Calangute. This short jaunt produced our first Lesser Whistling Ducks, our first Indian Peafowl, and our first Bronze-winged Jacanas. Breakfast was followed by lunch(!) back at our hotel and then we made the first of our two visits to the northern bank of the Chapora River at Morjim. There were no Goan rarities at Morjim on either trip but the site did provide a great introduction to what coastal Goan birding is all about – lots of birds amidst some gorgeous scenery. Morjim was just one of the many magnificently photogenic sites that we’d visit in this tiny state. The fabulous river mouth was, as it almost invariably is, thronged with a wide variety of gulls and terns and today it yielded stunning looks at a Small Pratincole, huge numbers of Brown-headed and quite a few Slender-billed Gulls, a whole host of terns, and our first majestic White-bellied Sea Eagle.
We were busier the following day with the morning excursion taking us to a grassland site near Carambolim before a late morning excursion around Santa Cruz and an afternoon trip to the Carambolim Lake area. All three sites proved hugely successful with the Carambolim Grassland area producing our first encounters with Brown Hawk-owl, Jungle Owlet, an exceptionally cooperative pair of tree-climbing Red Spurfowl, two Amur Falcons, Woolly-necked Stork, Lesser Adjutant, and both Glossy and Black-headed Ibises. Santa Cruz was just as exciting and yielded no less than four Greater Painted-snipe, both Greater Spotted and Steppe Eagles, and a Goan rarity in the form of a European Roller. An Indian Spotted Eagle and the first of the tour’s two checklist write-ins, an obliging Isabelline Shrike, were seen at Carambolim in the afternoon.
And there we have the essential pattern of our Goan excursions. Flexibility was the key, some people joined all the trips, some didn’t. On a good number of days, we’d start quite early, have a midday break back at the hotel before venturing back out; on other days we’d return to the hotel mid-afternoon and have the rest of the time off. On still other days we’d venture further afield, staying out all day – and the latter’s just what we did when we combined birding on a morning Crocodile or Back Waters trip with an Old Goa sightseeing excursion. It all went smoothly – as smooth as chocolate ice cream in fact!
We visited Bondla Wildlife Sanctuary, a small forest reserve at the base of the Western Ghats, early on day three. Bondla holds many species that we never see in the coastal strip and highlights for us there this year included a well-seen Sri Lankan Frogmouth - its pre-dawn, demonic laughing calls were the first vocalisations of any species that we heard there. Other Bondla specialities included our one-and-only seen Indian Pitta. It performed brilliantly, sitting right out for several minutes! He was so spectacular and so cooperative that, even though this was only the third day of the tour, he single-handedly made Indian Pitta our Bird of the Trip in the end-of-tour poll. We also heard several singing Malabar Whistling Thrushes. His enchanting, laid-back, comical song, reminiscent of some poorly synthesized man-made tune or an ‘Idle Schoolboy’, was so unusual and so hypnotic that it ensured that Malabar Whistling Thrush also ranked highly in our ‘Bird of the Trip’ poll. Other goodies on our first visit to Bondla included a pair of very cooperative Malabar Trogons, two Blue-bearded Bee-eaters, two Forest Wagtails, and our first Yellow-browed Bulbuls. But it was far from plain sailing however - we struggled with the park’s Brown Wood-owls and Rufous-backed Dwarf Kingfisher; the Ruby-throated Bulbuls and Indian Blue Robins had to wait for our second visit and even then the diminutive Speckled Piculet we heard just wouldn’t come out and play!
Returning to the coast we didn’t progress very far on Baga Ridge that afternoon – just far enough to have stunning, close-range looks at a Nilgiri Woodpigeon and seven Tawny-bellied Babblers.
We visited Mayem Lake early the following morning and we rewarded by superb looks at two Malabar Pied Hornbills, a roosting Indian Jungle Nightjar, a pair of Brown Fish Owls, and a small party of Painted Storks on our drive back to the coast. We took a commercial ferry over to Divar Island that same afternoon and revelled in superb looks at our first Black-winged Kite, more Black-headed Buntings, several Montagu’s and a juvenile Pallid Harrier.
A return visit to the Carambolim and Santa Cruz areas the following morning produced a distant Stork-billed Kingfisher, great looks at a Blue-faced Malkoha (a species that’s typically very elusive), an all-too-brief Eurasian Wryneck, and a fly-over Richard’s Pipit. The superb views we all had of the Yellow-wattled Lapwings en route to Lila’s Café more than compensated for any shortcomings that the early morning excursion might have had. We scrambled into some mangrove swamps at Tikanem the very next morning and some of us were rewarded by good looks at a couple of Slaty-breasted Rails and tantalisingly brief views of a Pallas’s Grasshopper Warbler.
Our second Bondla visit was just as much fun and just as productive as the first. It yielded our only Indian Scops Owl even before we’d arrived while our only Brown-headed Barbet and our only Dusky Crag Martins were also seen well before breakfast! A pale-morph Booted Eagle, a Crested Hawk-eagle, excellent looks at three stunning, Malabar Trogons, another Eurasian Wryneck, and half-a-dozen Dark-fronted Babblers all featured highly in the popularity stakes. We explored more of Baga Ridge that same afternoon and a couple of us were rewarded with views of two Barred Buttonquail.
We all had stunning looks at a Mongolian Short-toed Lark, another Sykes’s Warbler and our only Grey-necked Bunting on the Dona Paula ridge early the following day. Those delights were followed by an equally cooperative Indian Reed Warbler and two Stork-billed Kingfishers at Neura later that same morning and some superb Painted Storks near Carambolim that afternoon. Four Greater Painted-snipe were still near Santa Cruz on the morning of the 27th but that day will be mostly remembered for our backwaters ‘Crocodile boat trip’. The boat trip yielded seventy species with a fine adult Peregrine being new for the trip and one of the very first birds we saw from the boat. Our two primary targets, Collared and Black-capped Kingfisher, took a bit more effort but eventually gave superb views as did the two Mugger Crocodiles that we also all saw. Other goodies included a gorgeous White-bellied Sea Eagle and several close-range Western Ospreys. After the river trip we visited Verna Lake – it held thousands of ducks. Batim Lake held fewer but did deliver our only Pheasant-tailed Jacanas of the entire tour.
It took us a while to see the Great Pied Hornbill at Mayem on our last morning in the field but boy, didn’t we then see it well! The two Brown Fish Owls were still present and we added another ‘write-in’, a female White-naped Woodpecker, to our burgeoning checklists on the way to the Pomburpa car ferry en route back to our hotel.
Somehow, we also found time to visit the ancient Hindu temple at Tambdi Surla and the former Portuguese capital at Old Goa.
Towards the end of the tour we also had an exciting backwaters boat trip in search of still more kingfishers (we finally tallied six species of these true avian gems). Good though the boat trip’s Collared Kingfishers were, the Pilerne forest Rufous-backed Dwarf Kingfisher still outranked it in the end-of-holiday ‘Bird of the Trip’ poll.
By the end of the tour we’d explored most of the state’s premier birding sites, several of them such as Morjim, the Carambolim Grasslands, and Bondla Wildlife Sanctuary on a couple of occasions. We all had our favourites – favourite sites and favourite birds – and Bondla Wildlife Sanctuary was again my personal favourite site. Several other people’s favourite was Mollem WS and more specifically the forest clearing at Tambdi Surla. We had a fabulous morning here with great weather, stunning forest and Western Ghat scenery and some memorable birds such as Asian Fairy Bluebirds and a pair of Heart-spotted Woodpeckers.
Other long-term memories are sure to include a responsive Jungle Owlet near Carambolim, umpteen Indian Paradise Flycatchers, White-rumped Shamas, and Flame-throated Bulbuls. The list goes on and on.
At the end of our previous tour to Goa I wrote ‘despite an economy that’s among the planet’s fastest growing, India remains one of Asia’s poorest countries and, while there clearly is considerable private wealth, there remains considerable desperate poverty. Fortunately however, Goa has been largely spared the squalor and impoverishment that is the fate of the nation’s larger cities such as Bombay and Calcutta.’ These sentiments, the good and the bad, remain so, so true and undoubtedly will for many more years to come.
Oh, and I mustn’t forget the prawn curries and rice…well, there’s an entire book in there somewhere.
- Paul Holt
Maximum group size 9 with one leader.