Island Endemics & Pelagic 16th to 29th October 2018 (14 Days)

Iiwi by Owen Deutsch

Hawaii is the most remote archipelago on Earth, located north of the equator in the middle of the Pacific Ocean. Aside from the Islands’ world-renowned beauty, many unique features attract naturalists here, chiefly the high degree of endemism among the various life forms, active volcanism, verdant and varied native forests, and the surrounding great wilderness of the Pacific Ocean. The island chain’s Hawaiian RBL Hawaii Itinerary 2

Honeycreepers have long attracted birders – and understandably so. The diverse forms evolved from a single ancestor akin to a North American finch, into nectarivores, bark-pickers, insect gleaners, or borers of many brilliant colours. These honeycreepers and native birds of other families have unfortunately been decimated, beginning with the arrival of the Polynesians and continuing with the introduction of mosquitoes and a multitude of alien plant and animal species. Many bird species have consequently gone extinct, and the remaining survivors face a precarious future.

Our comprehensive tour covers the four major islands searching for some of the most critically endangered birds on the planet, while also featuring fantastic scenery and phenomenal underwater life. Some of the top birds of the tour include the bizarre Akiapolaau, endangered Bristle-thighed Curlew, tricky Hawaiian Petrel, elegant White (Fairy) Tern, nesting Albatross, and, of course, the charismatic Iiwi. Other endangered endemics include Akohekohe (Crested Honeycreeper), Akikiki ( Creeper), Hawaii Akepa, and the Critically Endangered Palila. Join us as we focus on these surviving endemic forest species, seabirds, and other Hawaiian avian specialities, along with the riches of this fabulous chain of picturesque tropical islands!

THE TOUR AT A GLANCE…

THE ITINERARY Day 1 Arrival in Lihue, Kauai. Day 2 Kauai - Kilauea Point and Hanalei NWR Day 3 Kauai - Alakai Wilderness Preserve and Koke’e State Park Day 4 Kauai - Pelagic Trip Day 5 Kauai - Nawiliwili Bay area and surrounds Day 6 Fly to . Honolulu, Kapiolani Park and surrounds Day 7 Oahu - Laie Point, James Campbell NWR and Kuliouou Valley Day 8 Fly to . Kanaha and Kealia ponds Day 9 Maui - Haleakala National Park and Waikamoi Preserve Day 10 Fly to Big Island. Waikoloa State Park and Hilo Ponds Day 11 Big Island - Hawaii Volcanoes NP, Crater Rim Drive and Chain of Craters Road Day 12 Big Island - Hakalau Forest National Wildlife Refuge Day 13 Big Island - Saddle Road & Pu`u La`au. Day 14 Final departures

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TOUR ROUTE MAP…

THE TOUR IN DETAIL…

Day 1: Arrival in Lihue, Kauai. Today is set aside as an arrival day on Lihue. This evening we shall meet for a welcome dinner to discuss our plans for the forthcoming days.

Day 2: Kauai - Kauai - Kilauea Point and Hanalei NWR. The island of Kauai is widely regarded as the greenest and most beautiful island of the Hawaiian Archipelago, and it’s also the oldest of the main islands. We begin our explorations with a visit to Kilauea Point National Wildlife Refuge. With a wonderful view of the sea and the surrounding coastline, small numbers of nesting Laysan Albatross will vie for our attention, as Brown and Red-footed Boobies and Red-tailed Tropicbirds fly nearby the lighthouse. Wedge-tailed Shearwaters are in their nest burrows at this time of the year, and we have a great opportunity to see the celebrated Nene, the endemic Hawaiian goose. Re-introduced to the mongoose-free island of Kauai, conservation efforts here have helped save the state bird from extinction. Nearby Hanalei Refuge is great for waterbirds, including Hawaiian Coot, Hawaiian Stilt, and can hold migrant and vagrant birds as well.

Day 3: Kauai - Alakai Wilderness Preserve and Koke’e State Park. The rugged mountains of Kauai are richly forested, and the winding unpaved roads give us access to the interior of this picturesque island. In order to find the scarce, native songbirds, it is necessary to travel to mountain forests above 3000 feet to avoid the devastating effects of invasive mosquitoes. Probably introduced from Central America in the nineteenth Nene by David Shackelford

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century, the warmer lowlands provided fertile breeding grounds for these pests which rapidly spread avian diseases (avian malaria), literally decimating the thriving native bird population. Today, only in the cooler highlands where mosquitoes are less successful, do native songbirds still persist.

Trekking our way on foot along boardwalks and forest trails, we will search for several critically endangered species. Our first Apapane, one of the most abundant and vocal honeycreepers, should light the way, and with luck we cna hope for the canary yellow Akiapolaau by David Shackelford Anianiau, the heavy-billed Kauai Amakihi, and Kauai Elepaio. The other island endemics are even harder to find, but with some luck and effort we could luck into the Critically Endangered Akeke’e, the Critically Endangered Akikiki (Kauai Creeper), or perhaps the scarce Puaiohi, one of Hawaii’s rarest surviving thrushes. Meanwhile introduced species abound, with Japanese White-eyes zipping all about, and this is one of the few areas where Red Junglefowl are deemed “countable”. On the drive down out of the highlands, we will stop at the spectacular Waimea Canyon, Hawaii’s own version of the Grand Canyon, where resident White-tailed Tropicbirds cruise the cliffs, and along the way we could happen upon the introduced Erckel’s Francolin.

Be prepared for rain this day and for hiking in wet conditions. The enchanting forest of the Alakai Wilderness is one the world’s wettest places, and while some days are gorgeous and sunny, more often it is cool and misty, or rainy. For those who wish to reach the prime birding sites within the Alaka’i, we will hike for a couple miles at a slow-moderate pace, and good hiking footwear, with ankle support offering some from moisture and mud is recommended.

Day 4: Kauai - Pelagic Trip. Today, weather permitting, we will embark on a half-day pelagic trip searching for seabirds, as well as whales and dolphins. The steep craggy cliffs offer spectacular scenery and with luck we might see the Endangered Newell’s Shearwater as well as possibly Hawaiian and Bulwer’s Petrels. Of course the sea brims with possibility, and Christmas Shearwater and Gray-backed Terns are possible, while it is a good season for off-the-wall “gadfly” (Pterodroma) petrels too. After a half-day at sea, we will have from mid-afternoon onwards to recuperate from the previous White Tern by David Shackelford day’s hike, and from what are often mildly bumpy seas offshore.

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Day 5: Kauai - Nawiliwili Bay area and surrounds. Tracking down Kauai’s birds is a tough task, and this includes both the declining endangered endemic songbirds, but also a number of introduced skulkers such as Greater Necklaced Laughingthrush, Hwamei, Japanese Bush Warbler, and Japanese Quail. As a result we have allotted another full day to try and clean-up any species that may have eluded us to date. As we search for missing species, we can expect to enjoy further or better views of other specialities, and may even return to certain favored sites.

Day 6: Fly to Oahu. Honolulu, Kapiolani Hawaii Amakihi by Owen Deutsch Park and surrounds. This morning we depart the picturesque island of Kauai, to head for the bustling but surprisingly birdy city of Honolulu. After a short flight to Oahu, we will do some local birding in the vicinity of Waikiki Beach and nearby Kapiolani Park. A host of well- established, introduced birds are likely to greet us at the edge of the world-famous Waikiki, where we will pass thousands of sunbathers living out their beach life dreams. South America’s brilliant Red- crested Cardinal and Africa’s Yellow-fronted Canary occur here, alongside the Indonesian native Java Sparrow. We will search through the Ironwood and weeping Banyan Trees to locate the beautiful native White Tern. This afternoon we will drive up into the highlands to search for the Oahu Amakihi, and see what other established exotics we can tick off.

Day 7: Oahu - Laie Point, James Campbell NWR and Kuliouou Valley. This morning, we will depart for an overlook at Laie Point, where we will scan the water’s surface below in attempts to pick out seabirds such as Sooty Tern, Sooty Shearwater, and if we are very lucky, the near-endemic Christmas Shearwater or Gray-backed Tern. We then visit a series of small wetlands in the vicinity of James Campbell National Wildlife Refuge where we are likely to find Hawaiian Coot, the endemic Hawaiian Duck (Koloa), the Hawaiian subspecies of Common Gallinule and Black-necked Stilt, as well as a few introduced species that could include Common Waxbill, Spotted and Zebra Doves, and Red-vented Bulbul. Our primary target in this area, however, is the Vulnerable Bristle-thighed Curlew, a unique rare shorebird that winters here in modest numbers. In the afternoon, we depart for a forested trail where we continue searching for local Hawaiian endemics such as the uniquely patterned Oahu Elepaio, and Oahu Amakihi. Akekee by Owen Deutsch

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Day 8: Fly to Maui. Kanaha and Kealia ponds. Departing Oahu after breakfast we make the short flight to Maui, where we begin by birding Kanaha Pond Wildlife Sanctuary. Thought to have been built in the 1700s by Kapiiohookalani (the island’s ruler) to raise and fatten fish, the ponds became severely degraded through the early 1900s. These days, the ponds are an important breeding area for endangered Hawaiian waterbirds including the Hawaiian sub-species of Black-necked Stilt, endemic Hawaiian Duck and Hawaiian Coot. Thereafter, we will make a stop at Kealia Pond National Park before finishing our day at the Haleakala Crater. Known by Apapane by Owen Deutsch early Hawaiian’s as the ‘House of the Sun’, this spectacular volcanic scenery is more reminiscent of the surface of the moon. While here, we will track down the photogenic, but rare Haleakala Silversword – a species of daisy endemic not only to Hawaii or Maui, but to this specific peak!

Day 9: Maui - Haleakala National Park and Waikamoi Preserve. Today we visit the restricted Waikamoi Forest Preserve owned by the Nature Conservancy, one of the last remaining tracts of native highland vegetation where Maui’s rare endemics cling to existence. Regretfully, as recently as 2004, yet another of the Hawaiian island’s remaining endemic birds became extinct near here, the little known Po'o-uli. Walking along the narrow boardwalk that descends through the ravine in a labyrinth of ferns, shaded by stunted montane growth, we have our first opportunity to see the bright Maui Alauahio (Creeper), and even the furtive, introduced Japanese Bush Warbler. We also stand an excellent chance of seeing one of the island’s most celebrated avian delights, the stunning scarlet and black Iiwi sporting a bright cherry-coloured sickle-shaped bill used for probing nectar from tubular flowers. We will also be searching hard for the elusive and Critically Endangered Maui Parrotbill as well as the equally endangered Akohekohe. Known locally as the Crested Honeycreeper, the Akohekohe possesses a decorative plume of feathers that extend from the base of its upper mandible, a unique feature among the Hawaiian honeycreepers.

*Due to the continued problems with Rapid ʻŌhiʻa Death, we may not be allowed to enter Waikamoi Forest Preserve. We will adjust our daily plans should this be the case.

Day 10: Fly to Big Island. Waikoloa State Park and Hilo Ponds. The youngest and most geologically active island, Hawaii is twice as big as all the other islands put together, hence it is more commonly known simply as ‘The Big Anianiau by Owen Deutsch

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Island’. In the afternoon, we will visit the local Hilo Ponds, searching for waterbirds, shorebirds and gulls. The ponds are a great for the endemic Hawaiian Coot, Wandering Tattler and Pacific Golden Plover, and can harbor strays and vagrants too.

Day 11: Big Island - Hawaii Volcanoes NP, Crater Rim Drive and Chain of Craters Road. Today we venture further to explore the spectacular Hawaii Volcanoes National Park. We have all day to enjoy the marvels of this natural Bristle-thighed Curlew by David Shackelford wonder including the Thurston Tube, scenic Crater Rim Drive circling around Kilauea , and the spectacular Chain of Craters Road allowing views of the more recent lava flows along the coast. Here we will also be able to study the difference between the distinctive pahoehoe and a’a varieties of lava. The Nene or Hawaiian Goose may be among the native bird species we encounter today, while we also expect to happen across the skulky Red-billed Leiothrix and attractive Chinese Hwamei.

Day 12: Big Island - Hakalau Forest National Wildlife Refuge. Hakalau Forest National Wildlife Refuge is one of the finest birding sites on the island of Hawaii. Today we will set out into the reserve of Koa-Ohia montane cloud forest, on the windward slopes of . Our efforts, as we walk through the open forest, will be to locate the endangered Hawaii Creeper, beautiful tangerine-orange Hawaii Akepa, Akiapolaau and one of the signature birds of Hawaii, the stunning Iiwi. We will also keep a keen eye out for the very scarce endemic Hawaiian Hawk, and later we may spend some time searching along the Stainback Highway if this unpredictable species proves elusive.

Day 13: Big Island - Saddle Road & Pu`u La`au. This morning, we head to Mauna Kea, a massive dormant volcanic peak rising over 4 200 meters above sea level. Measured from its base, Mauna Kea is,

Haleakala Crater moonscape by David Shackelford

RBL Hawaii Itinerary 8 in fact, the tallest mountain on earth, surpassing even Mount Everest at over 10 000m high. The pockets of unique tropical forest that surround this volcano along the famous Saddle Road support a wide diversity of endemic Hawaiian avifauna, and we will be searching for birds such as Omao (Hawaiian Thrush), furtive Hawaii Elepaio (Volcano form), the widespread Hawaii Amakihi, and our first opportunity to encounter the rare Akiapolaau, recognised for its remarkable bill including a short lower mandible for chiselling, coupled with a long flexible upper mandible sharply decurved for probing inside cavities. It is impossible to escape the large diversity of introduced species that occur here, with Common Pheasant sporting various colour forms, Kalij Pheasant, California Quail, Chukar Partridge, Wild Turkey, Erckel's, Black and Grey Francolins, Eurasian Skylark, Saffron and House Finches and African Silverbill all enjoying the conducive climate. We may also find Ruddy Turnstone, more Pacific Golden Plover and enjoy daytime views of Short-eared Owl as they quarter the nearby fields.

Day 14: Final departures. This morning our tours comes to an end at Hilo International Airport.

FINANCIAL ARRANGEMENTS: Tour dates, prices, single supplement rates, approximate flight costs and spaces available for this tour are displayed on our website. Please see under IMPORTANT NOTES below.

This includes:  All meals from dinner on day 1 to breakfast on 14;  Bottled drinking water;  All lodgings;  Ground transportation;  Extra activities mentioned in the itinerary;  Reserve entrance fees; and  All guiding services (including tips for local guides and services.)

The tour fee does not include:  Visa fees;  ANY flights (see above);  Any additional beverages;  Special gratuities; and  Telephone calls, laundry and other items of a personal nature.

IMPORTANT NOTES: a) Due to constantly fluctuating exchange rates, we quote our tours in 4 currencies. The tour price is however fixed only in the currency printed in bold, and the actual cost in the other currencies listed will be adjusted according to prevailing exchange rates at the time of final invoicing (usually 4 months before the tour.) The same applies to approximate flight and single supplement rates, which are also quoted in the respective fixed currency. b) Rates are based upon group tariffs; if the tour does not have sufficient participants, a small party supplement will have to be charged. c) Furthermore, these costs are subject to unforeseen increases in tour related costs and may have to be adjusted as a result.

RBL Hawaii Itinerary 9 d) Lastly, we may be forced to change or alter the itinerary and / or the designated Rockjumper leader/s at short or no notice due to unforeseen circumstances; please be aware that we will attempt to adhere as close to the original program as possible.

Tipping: As noted above, gratuities (drivers, hotel staff, restaurants etc) are included on this tour. However, this does NOT include your Rockjumper leader/s. If, therefore, you feel that he/they have given you excellent service, it is entirely appropriate to tip them.

Special Notes / Pace & Amenities:  To reach the areas with native songbirds, a few longer hikes are required. In a couple of instances, we will spend about 4 hours away from our vehicle. These longer hikes are undertaken at a modest pace, but rain is not unusual, and we encounter some muddy patches, may have a creek crossing or two, and there is some uphill/downhill hiking. We do not cover great distances on foot (perhaps 4 miles on the longer hikes; most days we walk less than 2), but participants hoping to see the native songbirds should be prepared for some stretches of time away from the vehicle. During these, a moderate amount of hiking is involved, and in some cases field stops are the only option for rest breaks. You should be in good health and reasonable fitness to undertake this tour. If you have any physical limitations or medical conditions of any sort, please let the Rockjumper office know in advance of the tour.  Due to the continued problems with Rapid ʻŌhiʻa Death, we may not be allowed to enter Waikamoi Forest Preserve. We will adjust our daily plans should this be the case.  The hotels are of a comfortable standard throughout.  Transport on the islands is by minibus. The roads are mostly in good condition; however, due to the nature of the topography, there is the possibility of landslides having a minor interference with our trip.  Most days in the lowlands will be hot, humid and sunny. In montane areas, it will range from very cool (bring a fleece and a raincoat) to warm. The central mountain range of Kauai is one of the wettest locations in the world (up to 10m of annual rainfall!), but the weather here, as in much of Hawaii, varies. We do anticipate encountering some rain during the tour, but preparing to protect yourself from the sun is equally, or more important.

ARRIVAL & DEPARTURE DETAILS: This tour does not include ANY airfares. The tour will depart from Lihue Airport, Lihue (IATA: LIH). As day 1 has been set aside as an arrival day, you are free to arrive at any time. We have scheduled a welcome dinner on the first evening, please see further details below. The tour will conclude at Hilo International Airport, Big Island (IATA: ITO) on day 14 after breakfast.

Those arriving at the hotel by 18:30 will enjoy a welcome dinner together. If you arrive by 22:00, please be in touch with your guide upon check-in so he can brief you on the following day’s plans. If arriving after 22:00, please look for a message from you guide at the front desk, detailing the following day’s plans.

The above information in respect of arrivals and departures is a guide only. Precise arrival and departure information will be sent to you in your Tour Confirmation package once the tour has been officially confirmed. If you wish to arrive early and/or depart late and would like assistance in this regard, kindly contact the Rockjumper office.

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FLIGHTS: Honolulu International Airport (IATA: HNL) is the main port of entry into Hawaii for this tour offering a number of internal flights to Lihue for the start of the tour. Hilo International Airport (IATA: ITO), Hawaii (Big Island) is the main port of exit from Hawaii. We have the capacity to advise you on the best route according to your preferences, but your local travel agent will best be able to book these flights for you. We will book the domestic flights on your behalf. NB: Please DO NOT book any flights until you have consulted the Rockjumper office for confirmation on the status of the tour.

Rockjumper Birding Ltd Labourdonnais Village Mapou Mauritius Tel (USA & Canada) toll free: 1-888-990-5552 Email: [email protected] Alternative email: [email protected] Website: www.rockjumperbirding.com