Finding Gurney’s Pittas

Crouched in the undergrowth of a mosquito and leech-filled tropical forest I waited quietly, and patiently, for yet another view of the Gurney’s Pitta. I knew his ritual: every 35-55 minutes he came on a feeding cycle through this area. I never knew when he was going to appear and there was no way to know where exactly the pitta would appear. But sure enough, he would always come. And always silently. And unexpected.

Over the years, I have seen many birds, but the Pittas have always remained the absolute Holy Grail of birding for me. As a child I could not page through my bird book without poring over the images of the beautiful Angola Pitta (African Pitta, Pitta angolensis). As a young ringer and ornithologist, I had soft spot for the local forest robin-chats (Natal Robin, Chorister Robin, Bearded Robin, Starred Robin) and forest floor thrushes (Orange Ground Thrush, Spotted Ground Thrush, Olive Thrush). And in many ways, these forest thrushes and robin-chats are much like little orange pittas, in their own little way. At least I think so.

White-browed Robin-Chat (Cossypha heuglini), closely related to "my" forest robins. They kinda pretend to be orange pittas.

Whilst in Thailand this last July, I desperately wanted to see a pitta. And I finally did – a quick glimpse of a Blue-winged Pitta (Pitta moluccensis) just outside of Khao Sok National Park, quite enough to set my little heart on fire. Later in the day, fighting through tropical downpours and swarms of leeches, we picked up a Chestnut-naped Forktail (Enicurus ruficapillus) and then, a hopping shape under the boardwalk ahead. Stop! no sign of anything. 5 minutes go by, feel like a lifetime. we slowly creep forward. nothing. there it is! but what is it? wish I could get a clear view. guide, birding partner, and I all craning for views. nothing. there it is! gone. glimpse. gone. red cap? red under belly? no, it can’t be a Garnet Pitta (Pitta granatina). The light must be playing with us.
Eventually, the Hooded Pitta (Pitta sordida) came out to show off his glory. Gorgeous. And my first ever pittas on a two-pitta day! Crazy.

A few days later, we got to Khao Nor Chu Chi Wildlife Sanctuary to search for Gurney’s Pittas. And, I swear, within less than five minutes in the park, we saw the unmistakable shape of a pitta hopping up ahead. I had heard from many that Khao Nor Chu Chi (aka Khao Pra Bang Khram) was like pitta heaven, but I really had not expected this. Awesome.

It turns out that first pitta was “just” a Hooded Pitta:

Returning to the same spot an hour later, I had the luck to find the Hooded Pitta again. So, I spent some time marvelling in its beauty. Twenty minutes as a highlight of my birding life. That is, until another bird came and almost landed on top of the Hooded Pitta. Much much larger. And yellow! A Hooded Pitta and a male Gurney’s Pitta 15cm from each other!!!

Now I did think about exploring the rest of Khao Nor Chu Chi and I did spend some time on other trails, but it occurred to me that I now knew of a spot where I had at least two pitta species and it was reliable. and that is exactly why I wanted to go there. So I spent 2.5 days sitting in the undergrowth trying not to swat mosquitos, make any noise, shuffle about or look at any other birds. Because as soon as my attention got distracted, I took the chance of missing the pittas.

The thing is, the Gurney’s Pitta male that I was hanging out with was incredibly stealthy. He would scratch about in the undergrowth without making even the slightest sound and no matter how I disguised myself, how still I sat or where I was, he never ever appeared withing about 35m (100ft). It seems he was very very well aware of what was happening in his feeding territory and would quietly do his feeding rounds, appearing every 35-55minutes, but always knowing exactly where I was. The less conspicuous I was, the more he trusted me, and I ended up with a few passable video clips of the Gurney’s Pitta (and some terrible photos).

In total, I probably spent a good few hours with the Gurney’s Pitta. Stunning. Moving. Wonderful. Awesome. Burned in my mind. The funny thing is, on every day I have ever seen pittas (sample size 4 😉 I have seen two species! Now that is a trend I would like to keep up.

Happy birding,
Dale Forbes

5 comments add yours

  1. Great post…How exciting for you to find these birds..despite the bugs and ughh..leaches. Having never seen these birds, I really appreciate the video. I wish more birder bloggers would include video…It was very cool to see how the birds moved about. Thanks.

    • thanks for the comment Dawn. this gurney’s pitta video is for me one of best reasons why video is great. I always try to capture something of the bird I am photographing, or of the moment in which i experienced the bird. but that is sometimes really tough. in the case of these pittas, i was in a really dark forest which meant that i was struggling to get shutter speeds above 1/25s (really slow for 800mm focal length) even though I lived in >6400ISO. This all meant that the photos were really not that good (but good enough as a memory snap shot 😉 and did not get anywhere near capturing the moment. But the video shows so much about what makes a pitta: fast hopping, great colour, and a wonderful jungle noise setting. I really love that video.

  2. I think we have VERY different ideas on what counts as ‘passable’ video! That is superb.

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