Subject: [Tweeters] Birding in Ecuador
Date: Wed Mar 11 21:59:24 PDT 2020
From: Scott Ramos - lsr at ramoslink.info

Following my post about our Ecuador trip, I received several requests for more detail, about where we went, where we stayed, which field guides, more on logistics, etc. This was motivation to finish a blog I was writing anyway. Hopefully, it will answer questions.

https://naturenw.blog/2019/11/20/ecuador-2019/

Scott Ramos
Seattle



> On Feb 13, 2020, at 10:13 PM, Scott Ramos <lsr at ramoslink.info> wrote:

>

> Wet winter weather is a good time to catch up on tasks, so finally I was able to set up a Flickr album with photos from a trip to Ecuador that Dave Swayne and I did last November. We spent nearly two weeks with an energetic guide who shepherded us to habitats in dry forest and rain forest, from 1000 feet elevation at the Peruvian border to nearly 14,000 feet in the páramo. We stayed in upscale birding lodges and in practical hotels in small towns to facilitate travel to about a dozen different locations. With a half day visiting the Antisana outside of Quito to start, we ended up with nearly 450 species on the trip, well over 100 species as lifers for both of us. The Ecuador 2019 album (https://flic.kr/s/aHsmK3DLzD) contains good and mediocre photos of many of these species, illustrating the diversity that Ecuador has to offer. In addition, a few dozen butterflies and moths are included as more examples of the beauty of fauna in the tropics. Hope you enjoy!