birding-aus

Birding Volunteer Opportunity in South America

To: <>, Birding Aus <>
Subject: Birding Volunteer Opportunity in South America
From: "Arwen B. Ximenes" <>
Date: Mon, 13 Sep 2010 20:17:21 +1000
wow, you lucky thing, you. Maybe when I retire in a few decades or so I'll get 
the opportunity to do something like this.



I just thought I'd add to Nick's suggestion if there is anyone wanting to do 
something similar in the Atlantic Rainforest of Brazil, just near Rio de 
Janeiro. Not exclusively birding volunteer work, but you'd still get loads of 
opportunities to go birding. http://www.regua.co.uk/volunteer.html I have 
recently been to this place for a few days and it is beautiful.



Cheers,

Arwen



.........................................
Arwen Blackwood Ximenes
Lawson, Blue Mountains, NSW






> From: 
> To: 
> Date: Mon, 13 Sep 2010 09:45:16 +0000
> Subject: [Birding-Aus] Birding Volunteer Opportunity in South America
>
>
> To all the adventurous birders out there,
>
>
>
> A little off topic, but I though this may be of interest to some of the 
> younger (or young at heart) birders out there.
>
>
>
> I have just returned from an epic birdwatching experience; 2 months as a 
> volunteer at Tandayapa Bird Lodge in the Andean cloud forests of Ecuador. I 
> found out about this opportunity while birding in Ecuador earlier in the 
> year, made some inquiries, and was offered the opportunity to volunteer in 
> July and August. The lodge is located about an hour outside Quito, and the 
> only costs I incurred were travel to and from Quito (you could do this for 
> less than $2000). While volunteering at the lodge I didn't spend a cent, and 
> my only job, seriously, was to just go birdwatching every day, and 
> occasionally help on the birding tours passing through the lodge. During my 
> two months I recorded nearly 400 species, never travelling further than an 
> hour from the lodge, including over 30 species of hummingbird, a variety of 
> tanagers and toucans, Cock-of-the-Rock every other day, antpittas, antbirds, 
> the list goes on. I also got to do a one week trip to the Amazon where I got 
> another 240 species . In the two months my Ecuador list got to well over 600 
> species.
>
>
>
> Anyway, the position is always open to keen applicants, and the lodge owners 
> were happy for me to put the word out amongst Australian birders. If anyone 
> is interested, or would just like to ask a few questions about volunteering, 
> the lodge, or birding in Ecuador, please drop me an email.
>
>
>
> Good Birding
>
>
>
> Nick Leseberg
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