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Brown-throated Fulvetta

India - northeast: 

Mishmi Hills and the Brahmaputra [IN_NE002_MHB]

 

A 12-day, small group birdwatching tour of India's remote northeast corner, from the grasslands of upper Assam to 2655m in the Mishmi Hills, where the Himalayas meet the Indo-Burma hill ranges.

Our tour to extreme northeastern India takes us into a celebrated yet somewhat unexplored region encompassing parts of the state of Assam and neighbouring Arunachal Pradesh.  We combine a variety of areas and habitats within the bird-rich Eastern Himalayas and associated hill ranges with the Brahmaputra valley that divides them, exploring productive grasslands and vast wetlands, lowland tropical forests and some of the most intact subtropical forests in the entire Himalayan chain. We visit in November or late spring, when temperatures are comfortable at all altitudes. We will be looking for a selection of waterfowl, grassland endemics and specialities including Marsh Babbler, Swamp Prinia, Black-breasted Parrotbill and Bengal Florican, White-winged Duck, White-throated Brown Hornbilll, Grey Peacock-pheasant, and Eastern Himalayan specialities such as Mishmi Wren-babbler, Cachar Wedge-billed Babbler, Rusty-bellied and Gould's Shortwings, Temminck's and Blyth's Tragopans among a tantalising selection of laughingthrushes, scimitar-babblers, and mammals including Mishmi Takin and Western Hoolock Gibbon. 

 

 

Day 1-4:  Dibrugarh to Tinsukia

Arrivals into Dibrugarh airport this morning.  We set out on the short drive east to Tinsukia for a four-night stay, with the reminder of the afternoon and a further three full days to explore this region of Upper Assam.  In the marshy grasslands that flank the Brahmaputra River at Dibru-Saikhowa National Park and at nearby Maguri Beel we will go in search of three northeast Indian endemics, Black-breasted Parrotbill, Swamp Prinia and Marsh Babbler, alongside a selection of waterfowl, while in patches of lowland forest within Digboi Oilfields where we hope to encounter Rufous-necked and Chestnut-backed Laughingthrushes, and Collared Treepie.  We will also visit a vital remnant patch of lowland tropical forest at Dehing-Patkai Wildlife Sanctuary for an exciting selection of Eastern Himalayan and more widespread forest specialities, with birds such as Pale-capped Pigeon, Silver-breasted Broadbill, White-crowned Forktail, White-cheeked Hill-partridge, Grey Peacock-Pheasant, White-winged Duck, up to five species of hornbill including White-throated Brown Hornbill, various flycatchers, warblers and sunbirds in fast-moving feeding flocks, and vocal troops of India’s only ape, Western Hoolock Gibbon.

 

Day 5:  Tinsukia to the Mishmi Hills (Roing)

An early start for the journey northeast, crossing the Brahmaputra River as we head into the Mishmi Hills of Arunachal Pradesh, making our way to the small town of Roing at 400m in the Lower Dibang Valley, the last major township in India’s northeast frontier and our base for a three-night stay.  We will spend a total of six-nights in the Mishmi hills, dividing our time between two bases to enable a thorough exploration of the subtropical broadleaf forest and bamboo of the foothills and their flanking grasslands before ascending into coniferous forest and rhododendrons of higher elevations.  Around Roing, exploring the transition zone from these plains into the foothills will provide a tantalising introduction to the diversity of this region and we will encounter a good selection of Himalayan specialities during our stay here, including various tits, yuhinas, fulvettas and barwings.

 

Day 6-7: The Mishmi Hills (Roing)

Two full days exploring the diverse birdlife of the mosaic of floodplain grasslands and forest-flanked outer foothills of the Lower Dibang Valley from our base at Roing.  Key targets in grassland areas include the endemic Black-breasted Parrotbill and Bengal Florican.  In the low hills we will explore the sub-tropical forests in search of a broad range of species associated with these moderate altitudes, key among which are Red-headed Trogon, Green Cochoa, White-browed Piculet, Red-billed Scimitar-babbler, Pygmy Wren-babbler and all three diminutive tesias.

 

Day 8-10:  The Mishmi Hills (Mayodia)

We move higher into the hills to Mayodia at 2655m to spend these three days birding through a succession of incredible and largely undisturbed Himalayan forest habitats.  We will explore these on foot from the paved but relatively quiet road that ascends from Roing to its highest point at Mayodia, and beyond.  This is one of Asia’s least-explored birding areas, and birding here is both exciting and productive, with an extensive list of potential species that includes some of the most sought-after specialities of the Himalaya.  Among our key targets will be the endemic Mishmi Wren-babbler, and both Temminck’s and Blyth’s Tragopans, with other possibilities including Spotted and Grey-sided Laughingthrushes, Long-billed and Bar-winged Wren-babblers, Cachar Wedge-billed Babbler, Gould’s and Rusty-bellied Shortwings, Manipur and Brown-throated Fulvettas, Yellow-rumped Honeyguide, Ward’s Trogon, Fire-tailed Myzornis, Himalayan Cutia and a variety of shrike-babblers, bullfinches, bush-robins, thrushes, redstarts and accentors, plus mammals that include the endemic Mishmi Takin.

 

Day 11: The Mishmi Hills to Tinsukia

We will spend the morning making our way back into Assam, birding across the elevations as we descend from Mayodia back into the alluvial plains of the Brahmaputra basin to Tinsukia for a one-night stay, where time-permitting we may have the opportunity to re-visit sites during the afternoon.

 

Day 12: Tinsukia to Dibrugarh, depart

Spend a final few hours around Tinsukia focusing on any species we may have missed.  Departures from Dibrugarh airport this afternoon.

3 November -14 November 2021

with Lakpa Tenzing Sherpa

22 April - 3 May 2022

with Lakpa Tenzing Sherpa

*November departures may be combined with India-northeast: Nagaland's Amur Falcon Migration.

Duration: 12 days

Group size: min. 6 / max. 8 with 1 leader

2021: ₹ 191000

$ 2570 / £ 1850 / € 2130

(Dibrugarh/Dibrugarh)

Single room supplement: ₹ 36000

$ 485 / £ 350 / € 405

Deposit: $ 515 / £ 370 / € 430

The tour is priced in Indian Rupees (₹). Amounts shown in other currencies are indicative.

The tour price includes:

  • Accommodation

  • All meals and drinking water

  • Ground transportation

  • Services of a guide throughout

  • All birding and wildlife activities

  • Reserve entry fees

  • Regional permit (for Arunachal Pradesh)

  • Tour info, pre-travel notes and checklists

Estimated flight costs: $ 900 / £ 650 / € 755

Estimated visa costs: $ 40 / £ 30 / € 35

More information on what's included

Read about our small group surcharges

Custom tours

Best time: November, March to May

2021: from ₹ 273000 / $ 3675 / £ 2645 / € 3045

(Price per person based on 2 people travelling together; costs for other group sizes  on request)

Tour grading: Moderate.  Most birding will be on foot along quiet, paved roads or well marked forest trails, some from boats; the tour is intensive in terms of time spent in the field.  Note we bird to 2655m where altitude makes walking more strenuous.

Accommodation: Comfortable good to medium standard hotel in Tinsukia, basic rooms in mountain lodges/hotels in Roing and Mayodia, all with private facilities. 

Birds: 280+

Mammals: 10+

Photography: Good to excellent

Key species: Mishmi, Rufous-throated, Long-billed, Bar-winged and Eyebrowed Wren-babblers, Red-billed Scimtar-babbler, Cachar Wedge-billed Babbler, Grey-throated, Snowy-throated and Chestnut-capped Babblers, Grey-sided, Rufous-necked  and Rufous-vented Laughingthrushes, Black-eared and Black-headed Shrike-babblers, Brown-throated Fulvetta, Ward's Trogon, Himalayan Cutia, Fire-tailed Myzornis, Rufous-necked and White-throated Brown Hornbills, Collared Treepie, Common Green Magpie, White-throated Bulbul, Sultan Tit, Fire-breasted and Scarlet-backed  Flowerpeckers, Broad-billed and Yellow-vented Warblers, Spotted Bush-warbler, Slaty-backed, White-gorgeted, Pale-chinned and Sapphire Flycatchers, Large Niltava, Gould's, Rusty-bellied, White-browed and Lesser Shortwings, Siberian, Himalayan and Chinese Rubythroats, Himalayan Bluetail, Pale-capped Pigeon, White-browed Piculet, Temminck's and Blyth's Tragopans, Sclater's Monal (difficult), Grey Peacock-pheasant, Chestnut-breasted and White-cheeked Hill-partridges, Bengal Florican, Black-breasted, White-breasted and Grey-headed Parrotbills, Swamp Prinia, Marsh Babbler, Black-backed and White-crowned Forktails, White-winged Duck, Himalayan Owl, Collared Owlet, Mishmi Takin, Western Hoolock Gibbon.

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