Day 1: Arrival in Panama City
Our Panama birding tour begins with an evening orientation at our hotel. Night in Panama City.
Day 2: Cerro Azul and the Darien
Our first destination is Cerro Azul, where we take in the hummingbird feeders which are often highly productive and may include a couple of species we will not encounter elsewhere, such as Violet-capped Hummingbird. We then transfer to the Darien for a three night stay.
Days 3 and 4: Torti
The hotel in Torti lies in a world-class birdwatching zone and is becoming one of Panama’s top birdwatching sites. The forest is part of a biological corridor linking species east and west, Pacific and the Caribbean, as well as being on a zone between lowland and piedmont regions. It is an Important Bird Area, with many endemic species of the Darien lowlands and highlands. It has excellent hummingbird feeders including species not found anywhere else we go, such as Long-billed Starthroat and Scaly-breasted Hummingbird and is located very close to some excellent birding with plenty of species not found further west such as Sooty-headed Tyrannulet, Unicolored Becard, Sirystes, Barred Puffbird and Golden-headed Manakin, and other species that are rare elsewhere in Panama such as Speckled Mourner. The list of birds is increasing each year: they include several hummingbird species such as Stripe-throated and Green Hermits, Garden Emerald and Black-throated Mango; parrots including Mealy, Brown-hooded and Blue-headed; toucans such as Yellow-eared Toucanet and Keel-billed Toucan; tanagers like Golden-hooded and Sulphur-rumped, and rare and stunning species as Black-faced and Black-headed Antthrush, and Black-crowned and Streak-chested Antpittas. Night at Torti.
Day 5: Transfer to Canal Zone
We then transfer to the Canal Zone for a three night stay with some very productive birding on our way there. Night near the Panama Canal.
Days 6 - 7: Summit Gardens and Pipeline Road
Nestled in the vast Soberania National Park Rainforest, on the banks of the Panama Canal, is our superb accommodation. This is an area rich in bird species, including 3 species of forest-falcons, 16 species of hummingbirds, Chestnut-mandibled Toucan, Great Jacamar, Masked Tityra, Bright-rumped Attila, Broad-billed and Rufous Motmots, Blue Cotinga, Black-headed Tody-Flycatcher, Brownish Flycatcher (Twistwing), Plumbeous and Semiplumbeous Hawks, Great Black Hawk, Black Hawk-Eagle, Crested Eagle, Green Shrike-Vireo, Short-tailed Nighthawk, Spectacled Owl, Black-chested Jay and many antbirds, woodcreepers, puffbirds and trogons. Mammals include Three-toed and Two-toed Sloths, White-faced Capuchin and Agoutis.
Old Gamboa Road passes through scrubby and secondary growth habitat as well as pastures and other open country areas. Possibilities include Red-naped (Geoffroy’s) Tamarin monkeys and Central American Agoutis, along with Lance-tailed Manakin, Rosy Thrush-Tanager, Orange-billed Sparrow, Blue-crowned Motmot, Rufous-and-white Wren (a fine singer), Rufous-breasted Wren, three species of greenlets, and Green Honeycreeper are some we look for as well as a Panamanian endemic, Yellow-green Tyrannulet. Both Jet and White-bellied Antbirds occur in brushy thickets, and other interesting birds in this area include Scrub Greenlet and White-necked Puffbird.
We should do well for raptors; Gray-headed and Swallow-tailed Kites, Short-tailed and White Hawks and King Vulture are frequently seen.
Pipeline Road starts out in scrubby mature secondary tropical moist forest with patches of primary forest, eventually merging into primary forest. This legendary place ranks as one of the finest birding areas in the neotropics, and daily tallies can be very impressive: tanagers, woodcreepers, antbirds, toucans, puffbirds including Black-breasted and Pied, and much more. We concentrate on those goodies that we haven’t already found, and with luck we may find Rufous-fronted Wood Quail or Rufous-vented Ground-Cuckoo. If we find an army ant swarm, then attendant ant-followers could include Spotted, Bicolored, Ocellated and Chestnut-backed Antbirds. Manakins include Golden-collared, Blue-crowned and Red-capped, trogons include Slaty-tailed, Gartered and Black-throated, and woodpeckers include Cinnamon, Black-cheeked, Crimson-crested and Lineated Woodpecker. Nights at near the Panama Canal.
Day 8: Return to Panama City and Metropolitan Park
We leave and travel back to Panama City. We visit Metropolitan Park, 260-hectares of Pacific dry forest, which harbours many interesting birds and mammals, including Geoffroy’s tamarin monkeys and Central American Agoutis. Species we could encounter include Lance-tailed Manakin, Rosy Thrush-Tanager, Orange-billed Sparrow, Blue-crowned Motmot, Rufous-and-white Wren and Green Honeycreeper and another chance for Yellow-green Tyrannulet. The park is renowned for being very “birdy” and we should amass quite a tally here. Night in Panama City.
Day 9: Departure home
Our Panama birding tour ends this morning. The hotel will provide breakfast and transfer to the airport at the appropriate time, depending on each person’s flights home.