Chlidonias Goes To Asia, part three: 2013-2014

The Hangzhou Zoo and Nanjing Zoo near your city are both much better than Wenzhou Zoo. But Chengdu Zoo is indeed better; however, I have just heard something disappointing: the zoo has just destroyed its small mammal area to build the new tiger-lion-mountain, thus the golden cats, jungle cat, lynx, large Indian civet and other small mammals are kept off-exhibit now :(
 
The Hangzhou Zoo and Nanjing Zoo near your city are both much better than Wenzhou Zoo. But Chengdu Zoo is indeed better; however, I have just heard something disappointing: the zoo has just destroyed its small mammal area to build the new tiger-lion-mountain, thus the golden cats, jungle cat, lynx, large Indian civet and other small mammals are kept off-exhibit now :(
aargh, don't tell me that!!
 
I haven't been up to much in Suzhou over the last week. I've been to the Shanghai Zoo twice, and I have been to the Suzhou Zoo. I have seen some incidental birds around about, but I have only done one day of “real” birding, and that was with a local birder called Kevin who about a month ago had offered to show me some birds. He had not anticipated the Chlidonias Effect – it's like the Lynx Effect, but instead of the birds being attracted to me, they are actively repelled. Where I am, the birds are not. My birding luck is so bad that it actually cancels out anybody else's good luck. I do usually end up finding what I'm after, I just have to work twice as hard to get there! (But there-in lies the game).

Because we needed an early start Jess and I were aiming to get to Shanghai from Suzhou at around 6 or 6.30am. I very wisely had gone to the station the day before to get the tickets. I said to the ticket lady that I needed to be in Shanghai by 6am. She tapped some computer keys and said “this is the only train,” swivelling the screen to show me. It got into Shanghai at 7.30am.
“That's the earliest one?!” I asked, a bit incredulously because I knew the trains ran very regularly between Suzhou and Shanghai from very early in the morning.
“Yes,” she said.
“There are no earlier ones at all?”
“Hmmm...” She tapped a few more keys. “Well, there are these ones...” Like, only a lot of earlier ones!

I chose the earliest one, which would get us into Shanghai at 5.45am (followed by 45 minutes on the subway from the Shanghai station to the Hongqiao station where Kevin was meeting us, because the first train from Suzhou direct to Hongqiao didn't get in until 8.45am). Of course, this train meant we had to be at the Suzhou station at 4.30am. Jess was not very impressed by this but she hasn't been able to do any birding at all since coming to China months ago so she didn't complain too much. I also bought some return tickets for the evening. It turned out I needn't have bothered with those ones......

The way the day was going to go should have been obvious when our train in the morning was an hour late; we didn't get to Hongqiao until 7.30am. The Hongqiao train station is quite large. And when I say “quite” I mean “freaking”. Jess and I got lost briefly trying to find our way from the train to the car park, then we found Kevin but lost the car (interestingly enough the different parking levels seem to be identically numbered.....this level P10, next level, P10 again.....not confusing at all!!). Anyway, soon we were on our way. Our destination was Xiao Yang Shan, an island which acts as a migrant trap at this time of year (for once I'm somewhere at the right time of year! Yay!). It is accessed across the world's second longest bridge. I might have got these names a bit muddled but the first spot we were going to is known as the Magic Rubbish Dump, the next as the Magic Valley, then back across the bridge to Magic Grasslands and lastly Magic Car Park. The names need to be changed now that I have been there and broken them all.

Birding of course is all ups and downs. A spot that is fantastic one day can be empty the next, especially when migrants are concerned. Today was one of those “down” days, apparently not helped by the wind and lack of recent rains. I don't complain too much though; all birds are good birds to me. The first bird at the first stop (apart for the Chinese bulbuls) was a yellow-browed bunting which was a lifer for me and I never complain about lifers! Everything was really dry but zipping through the scrubby trees were lots of Asian brown flycatchers and female/juvenile blue and white flycatchers. Almost every bird we saw was one of those two species. Up above a peregrine was being harrassed by a pair of kestrels (I've never seen a peregrine before, but I'm not counting that one because I didn't really see it well). Not finding much in the trees we walked on around the path to see if anything was around the corner. There was not, so we went back to the trees. Jess had been distracted by the ground because she's blonde, so we left her there and carried on trying to bird. There's a little garden plot by some shacks and we had some good luck there, with a red-flanked bluetail and a Swinhoe's (rufous-tailed) robin both bouncing around picking up insects. A scaly thrush came barrelling past as well. Being from New Zealand, I'm most used to song thrushes and European blackbirds; something like a scaly thrush looks huge to me! So not a lot of birds around but four of them were lifers and they were all really nice lifers as well which is even better! Jess reappeared carrying an armful of rocks and looking very pleased with herself. She had lost her binoculars through a complicated series of events (really nice binoculars too, with an image stabiliser inside so she can use them on boats) and she doesn't like mine too much because I've dropped them a few times and so they aren't as good as hers, and so today she decided to concentrate on rocks instead because it is hard to bird properly without your own pair of binoculars. The good thing with rocks of course is that they don't fly away.

Not far from the Magic Rubbish Dump is Magic Valley. There is a massive container port there which stretches for a kilometre. That's not what we were there for though. Once again the trees had quite a lot of birds in them, it's just that they were almost all Asian brown flycatchers! One of the blue and white flycatchers here was a male though, absolutely stunning bird! There were also a couple of grey-streaked flycatchers, some great tits and a couple of female Siberian blue robins. A pair of striated herons in a tree were confusing at first because we couldn't see what they were, just that they were big and dark. A kestrel gave me some good views, and another (or the same) male blue and white flycatcher posed nicely in an exposed tree. I was hoping for a grey nightjar which get seen here, but no luck with that.

So.... with not much happening around the place we moved onwards (or backwards, seeing we went back across the bridge) to the Magic Grasslands where there should have been waders in the ponds. The refrain of the day so far had been “where have all the birds gone?” which now got modified slightly to “where have all the waders gone?” (Much hilarity ensued later for Jess when we arrived at some reed beds and a whole lot of egrets and redshanks just up and left, simply because I had arrived). We did see a far-eastern curlew on the mudflats, and there were loads of little egrets, grey herons, and some great egrets as well, but that was it. Oh, Richard's pipits too on the way. I do like pipits and Richard's are a lifer for me since they split them from the New Zealand pipit. We kept going towards the Magic Car Park, which is at the Holiday Inn; the trees in the car park are where anything interesting in the area will turn up at dusk to roost. There are also supposed to be Siberian weasels living there which would have been the best bird of the day if we had managed to see them! We stopped a few times en route to the Holiday Inn to check out the reed beds (that's where we saw the flock of spotted redshanks and a little ringed plover) and on one of those stops the car decided enough was enough, it wanted to get in on the birding derailment action as well, and it just stopped dead. I'm not going to pretend I know anything about cars, so all I can say is that it wouldn't start again, for pretty much no reason at all.

Having called to arrange for a breakdown company, we set out walking towards the Holiday Inn which was a couple of kilometres up the road. The intention for the end of day had been to go to an area of reedbeds with a boardwalk 5km further on from the Holiday Inn to find reed parrotbills (that's probably where all the waders had absconded to as well) but it was too late to walk that far. On the way to the Holiday Inn we saw a little grebe and a whole bunch of coots (which are Jess' favourite bird for some reason), as well as one or maybe two blue rock thrushes. At the Magic Car Park the distinct lack of magic remained. No birds, no weasels.

We waited in the reception of the Holiday Inn for the vehicle to arrive from the breakdown company, and then got driven back to where Kevin's car was. Then we waited some more (and some more, and some more...) for the actual tow-truck to arrive. The train tickets I had for the trip back to Suzhou were for 8.45pm, but they were going to be useless now. While we waited Jess checked the train schedules on her phone. She had to be back in Suzhou that night, so we couldn't just stay in Shanghai unfortunately, because that would have been much easier! There were trains up until 11.40pm so I wasn't too worried, but when the tow-truck arrived it sort of seemed like that would become a problem because (as far as I understood) their company wouldn't let them take us that far into the city to the train station. They could take the driver (i.e. Kevin) all the way home with the car – practically next to the train station we wanted – but not the other two of us! I think it must have been an hour between the tow-truck getting there and us actually leaving, but eventually we settled on a compromise where they would take Jess and I to the nearest subway station and then we could make our own way to the train station.

We got dropped off at a subway station at 10pm, and got to the train station at 11pm. Fortunately I knew exactly where the ticket office was in relation to the station from having been there the other day so that saved us any confusion. I had been hoping that there wouldn't be many people there, it being so late, but when we got into the ticket office there were only three lines open, and all three had long queues. I looked at my watch, 11.15pm, the queues were at least half an hour long, the last train was at 11.40pm. It was either the train or a 500 Yuan taxi. Just this once I dropped the patient Westerner routine and went Chinese. I didn't go full Chinese, I didn't push or shove or elbow or kick or punch or stab anyone, I just strode right up to the front of the line and stepped in front of the first person. It was the first step in my downward slide to becoming Chlidonias sinensis. We got to the boarding gate with a few minutes to spare, arrived back into Suzhou at 12.50am the next morning, got a taxi with no queues (well, it was 1am!), and back to the hostel at 1.30am. Another birding day completed.
 
At the end of this you're going to tell us that Jess was your alter ego, aren't you? Yes, this all feels like 'Fight Club'. (Thylo and other younger readers: ten points if you can tell us the first and second rules of 'Fight Club'.)

Did you at least mime to the person at the front of the queue that you were late? Surely the cashier told you to piss off back to the end of the queue? And didn't anyone in the queue start to shout at you when you jumped it?
 
Oh and you can give this question the 'Jess' treatment if it's too personal, but roughly how much has your epic trip cost up to this point?
 
First Rule: You don not talk about Fight Club. Second Rule: You DO NOT talk about Fight Club.

And I love how it's always "Thylo and the other youngsters":p

~Thylo:cool:
 
First Rule: You don not talk about Fight Club. Second Rule: You DO NOT talk about Fight Club.

And I love how it's always "Thylo and the other youngsters":p

~Thylo:cool:

On this occasion though, you are the only youngun I know who is definitely reading this thread.

Did you have to Google the answer?
 
Did you at least mime to the person at the front of the queue that you were late? Surely the cashier told you to piss off back to the end of the queue? And didn't anyone in the queue start to shout at you when you jumped it?
1) Mimes don't work here, I've tried many different mimes and all of them simply get responded to with blank puzzlement. But yes, I did mime pointing at a watch.

2) The cashiers don't care if people jump queue, they just go ahead and serve them anyway.

3) Nobody actually seems to care if anyone else jumps queue. I think they are just so used to it that it doesn't even matter.


nanoboy said:
At the end of this you're going to tell us that Jess was your alter ego, aren't you? Yes, this all feels like 'Fight Club'.
that is a possibility. I'm not really going to know if that is in fact the case though, am I?
 
Oh and you can give this question the 'Jess' treatment if it's too personal, but roughly how much has your epic trip cost up to this point?

you mean, not admit the entire thing is just an imaginary scenario inside my own head?

So far I have spent roughly NZ$3950 while travelling over the last 66 days, which works out at an average of about NZ$60 per day. That is a good rate. In Australia I tend to average about $90 a day, in somewhere like Thailand about $15 a day. NZ$60 is a good mid-ground which I aim for, especially because these first few countries have been relatively expensive ones.

However I had to spend about NZ$1500 on things like the visas and accompanying documents etc for Russia, Mongolia and China before I even left NZ (Russia and China make things difficult for NZ travellers). Including that, the cost averages about NZ$83 per day (but because that was all taken care of before leaving I don't include it in my actual costs while travelling, if you see what I mean).
 
Have you seen any cool Engrish signs like the world tamous wine? Please post pics.
not Engrish as such, but I liked this sign: http://www.zoochat.com/1688/warning-sign-338991/

And also the following, not for the wording but for the little picture, because one of the items it is warning you not to throw down the toilet is your keys. I can't imagine many people deliberately throw their keys down the toilet.
 

Attachments

  • IMG_5853.JPG
    IMG_5853.JPG
    397.5 KB · Views: 22
One of my best animals so far this trip was seen in Shanghai, the raccoon dog. That was my "target mammal" for South Korea but I didn't see it there (I didn't see much there at all actually) but I was hoping I'd see one later in the trip. I had been told in confidence of a site in Shanghai where raccoon dogs could be reliably seen, but the site has to be kept under wraps so that they don't get trapped or persecuted, which is why I am putting this post as a separate one apart from the others so that there are no links.

I just saw one dog, but it seemed pretty relaxed about me being there. It was on the other side of a creek though so it probably knew it could get away faster than I could get across! It sort of lounged around outside the opening to the den, went for a little wander, had a drink. Pretty much just ignored me, unlike the mosquitoes which covered my arms in welts (I didn't want to scare the dog by slapping at them!). There was a fair bit of rain that day so I got pretty much soaked, and I think that's probably why there was only one dog out instead of the whole family. They seem to spend the day just hanging out around the den, and go off at night to look for food.

Pretty awesome animals. (The photos are pretty crappy though because I couldn't focus very well, the light was so dim!).

http://www.zoochat.com/733/raccoon-dog-nyctereutes-procyonoides-339662/ and http://www.zoochat.com/733/raccoon-dog-nyctereutes-procyonoides-339663/
 
For those conditions it is actually a very good picture. Very nice result even if it is a mammal :p
 
So the NZ$60 is including flights? That is very decent.
nope, the flights I've had so far (NZ to South Korea, then to Vladivostok, and between Ulan Baatar and Beijing -- and also the Trans-Siberian train) were paid for before the trip for visa reasons, and so I'm not counting them in what I've spent while actually on the road. But it does include the trains I've taken in China, and any further planes will be in the travel total (except the one out of China which is already paid for).

If I include the flights so far, then that makes the average the NZ$83 one.
 
(Russia and China make things difficult for NZ travellers).

That's because they know the trouble we (Australia) have with Kiwis, and they're afraid you'll never go home!

:p

Hix
 
Last edited:
That's because they know the trouble we have with Kiwis, and they're afraid you'll never go home!
that may well be.

Possibly connected to the complexity of getting the visas, is that NZers are few and far between in Russia and China. Most Chinese don't even seem to have heard of New Zealand, but they have heard of Australia.
 
Back
Top