Tari

The Tari Valley, in PNG's Southern Highlands Province, was only explored by Europeans as recently as the 1930s. Astonishingly, they found a fully-developed "stone age" society and culture, numbering over 100,000 people. Older residents of the town still remember this "first contact" with the outside world.

 

The town sits in the chilly, wet highlands, with the ramshackle buildings surrounded by superbly tended vegetable plots and even floated watercress beds, and beyond that, fantastic, bird-rich primary forest.

 

 

Black-breasted Boatbill - the upland counterpart of the Yellow-breasted
species, but this one is endemic (and it goes to 11!)

The only practical way to get to Tari is by air, so we took the 90 minute flight in a smallish plane up from Port Moresby, arriving through a hole in the clouds late morning.

 

Our arrival was an experience in itself - we felt like The Beatles! Hundreds of locals, many in traditional dress (cassowary plumes, BoP feathers, wigs, nasal piercings) thronged outside the airstrip fence, eagerly waiting to see who was arriving from Moresby. And they get almost daily flights!

 

 

Obviously, this wasn't us landing....
The welcoming committee
Baggage reclaim and a gathered multitude
Simon throws a lovely arrow

A local "big man's" funeral was going on, and so the town was especially busy - massive pig BBQs, extra Huli wigmen and special finery - plus lots of roadside darts challenges (which Simon tried out) going on.

 

The amazing Ambua Lodge was only about an hour from town - an oasis of luxury perched high among manicured lawns and on the edge of the forest. Fantastic!

 

Not so fantastic was Simon's health - a severe bout of the you-know-whats laid him low for about two days, limiting the birding somewhat - hence he dipped Sooty Owl and Lawe's Parotia (among others - but got most things back!).

 

 

 

 

Ambua Lodge - what a place!
Ambua Lodge again
Birding Tari Road - note Simon
feeling ill on the right.....urgh
The spectacular Blue-capped Ifrit
Sooty Owl - a major dip for the laid-low Smon, this one....

But there was stacks to see,mostly from the rough road up the hill towards Mount Hagen (12 hours' drive away!).

 

 

Less gaudy, but just as cool - a
point blank Papuan Treecreeper
Much desired, and much
grilled - Wattled Ploughbill

We scored very heavily with BoPs at Tari - Stephanie's and Ribbon-tailed Astrapias, Short-tailed Paradigalla, King of Saxony (what a bird! Simon's no.2 of all time, only trumped by sum. plum. Black-throated Diver....), Blue and Superb BoPs, and Brown & Black Sicklebills. Wow.

 

 

Black-throated Robin - only Julia saw this!
King of Saxony BoP - saints preserve us...

Also here were such megas as Wattled Ploughbill, Papuan Harrier, Papuan Treecreeper, Tit Berrypecker, Blue-capped Ifrit, Lesser Melampitta, Rufous-backed, Yellow-browed, Belford's and Common Smoky Honeyeaters, Loria's Satinbird, Black-throated, Blue-grey and White-winged Robins, Regent and Sclater's Whistlers, Friendly and Black Fantails, Red-collared Myzomela and Brehm's Tiger-parrot - to name but a small selection. Every single one of the birds in this paragraph is endemic - i.e. only found in New Guinea!

 

 

Tit Berrypecker - living up to
its name on both counts!
The stunning Red-collared Myzomela
Ribbon-tailed Astrapia - make sure
you see exactly where his tail ends!
Blue BoP - outrageous, gaudy and awesome
 
 

While Simon remained tied to the lavatory, Julia and the others had an excellent "cultural experience" (as they say) in a local village - in fact the one with the Sooty Owl.

 

This involved the whole village turning out to help everyone across very dubious bridges, swamps and muddy trails - and of course there were some commercial opportunities if you were a bow and arrow salesman!

 

The weather at Tari was distinctly changeable - but hey: it's a rainforest after all! Some incredible birds at an incredible lodge.

A local man with his stone axe
A local man with his baseball cap
Friendly Fantail
Common Smoky Honeyeater
With Benson, our local guide
Short-tailed Paradigalla - actually a BoP

Departure was also "interesting" - we were ushered into a cinder-block hut which doubled as "departures", and had to make the best of it!

 

 

Full blow-by-blow
trip report

Continue to Mt Hagen

 
An incredible cloud-strewn dawn
The departures hall....

Continue to Mt Hagen

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