INTERIOR BRAZIL BIRDING TOUR: DETAILED ITINERARY
Interior Brazil: Day 1
Our Interior Brazil tour starts this morning at Palmas airport. Palmas is the capital city of Tocantins state.
(We will be pleased to arrange your internal flight to Palmas from your arrival city in Brazil on request, even if you are arranging your own international tickets.)
From Palmas, we will head southwest to the Bananal area of the mighty Araguaia River region for a three-night stay.
This afternoon, we will begin our exploration of the Bananal region.
Interior Brazil: Days 2-3
The star attractions here at Bananal are five very range-restricted endemics: the beautiful Kaempfer’s Woodpecker, Araguaia Spinetail, an as yet undescribed species of Certhiaxis spinetail (known as Bananal Spinetail), Bananal Antbird, and the handsome Crimson-fronted Cardinal.
Other specialities of the area include the fast-declining Orinoco Goose, the very patchily-distributed endemic Chestnut-bellied Guan, such additional endemics as Jandaya Parakeet, Glossy Antshrike and Smoky-fronted Tody-Flycatcher, and such near-endemics as Red-throated Piping Guan, the uncommon Long-tailed Ground Dove, Cinnamon-throated Hermit (of the form maranhoensis, which may represent a distinct species), Eastern Striolated Puffbird and Santarem Parakeet.
Many other species will be recorded during our stay, and in this area, there are strong influences from both Amazonia (we are in a transitional zone at the Araguaia) and the Pantanal in the composition of the local avifauna.
Likely species include Little Tinamou, Brazilian Teal, Great Potoo, Band-tailed Nighthawk, Ladder-tailed Nightjar, Greater Ani, Little Cuckoo, Pale-vented, Scaled and Ruddy Pigeons, Blue Ground Dove, Sungrebe, Purple Gallinule, Collared Plover, Wattled Jacana, Spotted Sandpiper, the huge Jabiru, Anhinga, Neotropic Cormorant, Roseate Spoonbill, Rufescent Tiger Heron, Striated, Cocoi and Capped Herons, Great and Snowy Egrets, the strange Hoatzin, Greater Yellow-headed Vulture, Osprey (a seasonal visitor), Swallow-tailed Kite, Long-winged Harrier, Black-collared, Great Black and Short-tailed Hawks, Tawny-bellied Screech Owl, Black-banded Owl, Green-backed and Blue-crowned Trogons, Green, Green-and-rufous and American Pygmy Kingfishers, Amazonian Motmot, Spotted and Swallow-winged Puffbirds, Black-fronted Nunbird, Lettered and Black-necked Aracaris, Gould’s Toucanet, Channel-billed Toucan, White-wedged Piculet, Red-stained and Red-necked Woodpeckers, Barred Forest Falcon (uncommon), Blue-headed Parrot, Orange-winged Amazon, Red-shouldered Macaw and the lovely Golden-collared Macaw.
Among the likely passerines are Plain-brown, Long-billed, Striped, Buff-throated and Straight-billed Woodcreepers, Southern White-fringed Antwren, Band-tailed Antbird, Forest Elaenia, Ringed Antpipit, Amazonian Inezia, Zimmer’s Tody-Tyrant, Rusty-fronted and Spotted Tody-Flycatchers, Grey-crowned and Rufous-tailed Flatbills, Piratic, Rusty-margined and Variegated Flycatchers, Greyish Mourner, Cinnamon and Bright-rumped Attilas, Purple-throated and Bare-necked Fruitcrows, Spangled Cotinga, Blue-backed and Band-tailed Manakins, Masked Tityra, Green-backed Becard (uncommon), Ashy-headed Greenlet, White-winged Swallow, Moustached and Buff-breasted Wrens, Violaceous Euphonia, Yellow-browed and Pectoral Sparrows, Red-breasted Blackbird, Solitary and Yellow-rumped Caciques, the stunning Rose-breasted Chat, White-shouldered and Magpie Tanagers, Lined Seedeater and Chestnut-bellied Seed Finch.
Interior Brazil: Day 4
Today is a travel day as we head southeastward into the state of Goiás. Our destination is the remote town of São Domingos, where we will spend two nights.
We should arrive in time for some initial exploration in the vicinity of this remote but attractively situated little town.
Interior Brazil: Day 5
It is not often we travel such a long way for one target species, but the endemic Pfrimer’s Parakeet is not just some dull tyrannulet or the like but a superb psittacid that few birders have ever seen! Pfrimer’s Parakeet, which is in rapid decline due to deforestation, has an extremely restricted range in northern Goiás and adjacent Tocantins, and favours dry deciduous or semi-evergreen woodland in karst limestone areas.
Today, we will explore the beautiful limestone hill country around São Domingos, and it should not be too long before we encounter this ‘megabird’ in the forest at the base of the sheer cliffs. The scenery here is outstanding, and there is a spectacular cavern where a river disappears into the bowels of the earth!
Another special bird of this remote region is the endemic and very localised Yellow-faced Parrot.
Both Outcrop Sabrewing and Sao Francisco Black Tyrant can be difficult birds to find, but here in the São Domingos area, we will have our first chances.
Interior Brazil: Day 6
From São Domingos, we travel southeast to the municipality of Januária, situated in the huge state of Minas Gerais and in the middle reaches of the mighty São Francisco River (one of Brazil’s largest), where we will stay for three nights.
We should arrive in the area in good time to look for Plain-tailed Nighthawk and other new birds.
Interior Brazil: Days 7-8
The Cavernas do Peruaçu National Park is an important reserve that protects the typical ‘mata seca’ of the area as well as wooded caatinga. It is also one of the most famous prehistoric archaeological sites in South America, with many caves and rock paintings from thousands of years ago.
One of our main targets will be the rather prehistoric-looking endemic Moustached Woodcreeper, a rather rare bird through its range. In our favour, the national park seems to be this species’ stronghold. Certainly, this is the best place in the country for finding this large woodcreeper.
Our priority list will also include the local race of the Scaled Woodcreeper (considered by some a separate species – Wagler’s Woodcreeper), the uncommon Brazilian caatinga-endemic Great Xenops and Red-shouldered Spinetail, the uncommon endemic White-browed Guan, the endemic Sombre Hummingbird and Long-billed Wren and the near-endemic Rusty-margined Guan and Sibilant Sirystes.
We will also have chances for Yellow-legged Tinamou and the uncommon and localised endemic Outcrop (or Dry Forest) Sabrewing, the tricky White-browed Antpitta, Sao Francisco (or Caatinga) Black Tyrant and Sao Francisco Sparrow.
The park also offers opportunities to find such species as Grey-headed Kite, Grey-cowled Wood Rail, Plumbeous Pigeon and perhaps Pheasant Cuckoo. A nightbirding session could turn up Spectacled and Black-banded Owls and Rufous Nightjar.
The impressive rocky paintings will also be a highlight of our visit to the park, allowing us to reflect on our historic dependence (or otherwise) on nature and how important conservation can be in our planet’s very near future!
During our time in the Januária region, we will also cover caatinga habitats (from semi-open dry scrub to arboreal) next to the bank of the São Francisco River.
Our major target here is the restricted-range endemic Plain-tailed Nighthawk, but for this, we will have to wait until dusk.
A pleasant session until it gets dark should include numerous bird species, including the endemic White-throated Seedeater and the range-restricted White-bellied Nothura.
Other birds likely in this area include Undulated Tinamou, White-faced and Black-bellied Whistling Ducks, Lesser Yellow-headed Vulture, Crane Hawk, Snail Kite, Giant Wood Rail, Black-necked Stilt, Lesser and Greater Yellowlegs, Large-billed and Yellow-billed Terns, Picui Ground Dove, Ruby-topaz Hummingbird, Ringed and Amazon Kingfishers, Rusty-backed Spinetail, Red-billed Scythebill, Stripe-necked Tody-Tyrant, Tawny-crowned Pygmy Tyrant, Greater Wagtail-Tyrant, Large Elaenia, Black-backed Water Tyrant, Solitary Cacique, Variable Oriole, Orange-fronted Yellow Finch, Silver-beaked Tanager and Greyish Saltator.
Interior Brazil Day 9
After some final birding around Januária, we will travel to Montes Claros for a two-night stay. This afternoon, we will visit Lapa Grande State Park.
Interior Brazil Day 10
We have a full day for exploring the rich ‘mata seca’ of Lapa Grande State Park at Montes Claros. The park is right next to the city, and a good mix of species, including cerrado and caatinga specialities, will easily entertain us for a day.
Here we expect to record a really splendid variety of Brazilian endemics including Yellow-legged Tinamou, Spotted Piculet, the superb Ochre-backed Woodpecker, Caatinga (or Cactus) Parakeet, Caatinga Cacholote, Grey-headed Spinetail, Caatinga Antwren, Planalto Slaty Antshrike, the very localized Minas Gerais and Reiser’s Tyrannulets (the latter is uncommon), Ash-throated Casiornis, the localized Sao Francisco (or Caatinga) Black Tyrant, White-naped Jay, the localized Sao Francisco Sparrow, Campo Troupial, Pale Baywing, Red-cowled Cardinal, Scarlet-throated Tanager, and in particular the very localized endemic Outcrop (or Dry Forest) Sabrewing. We should also encounter the distinctive endemic Caatinga form of the Barred Antshrike. Additional specialities include the near-endemic Black-bellied Antwren and the patchily distributed Stripe-backed Antbird. Yes, that impressive list of specialities just keeps on and on…! What an amazing place Lapa Grande is!
Other species we may well encounter include Grey-lined Hawk, Black-and-white Hawk-Eagle, Ornate Hawk-Eagle (uncommon), Dark-billed Cuckoo, Rusty-breasted Nunlet, Golden-green and Crimson-crested Woodpeckers, Bat Falcon, Pale-legged Hornero, Ochre-cheeked Spinetail, Great Antshrike, Black-tailed Myiobius, Crested Becard, Tropical Gnatcatcher, Orange-headed and Hooded Tanagers and Ultramarine Grosbeak.
Interior Brazil Day 11
Today, we will head southwards to the town of Pompéu for an overnight stay. Pompéu is situated well to the northeast of São Roque and to the southwest of Belo Horizonte.
There is one big reason why we have come to this little town – seeing a tricky crake! With the help of local guides, we will visit a site where the shy, near-endemic Ocellated Crake is being very cooperative for great views and photos. (The near-endemic Rufous-faced Crake used to be seen in the area regularly. Sadly, the habitat was destroyed, but there is always the chance the guides will find a new area.)
The rich cerrado in the area should offer some additions to our list, including the marvellous, near-endemic Coal-crested Finch and Copper and White-bellied Seedeaters, as well as Plain-breasted Ground Dove, the marvellous Blue-and-yellow Macaw, Red-bellied Macaw, Turquoise-fronted Amazon, Rusty-backed Antwren, Greater Thornbird, Chotoy Spinetail, the charismatic Suiriri Flycatcher with its impressive display (the form here has sometimes been split as Chapada Suiriri or Chapada Flycatcher) and Black-faced Tanager. There are also chances to catch up with tricky species such as Lesser Nothura, Campo Miner, Henna-capped Foliage-gleaner and Black-masked Finch.
Interior Brazil Day 12
Most of the morning will be spent around Pompéu, checking for crakes and cerrado specialities.
Afterwards, we will drive to São Roque de Minas in the southwest of Minas Gerais, where we will stay for four nights. The town is situated adjacent to the famous Serra da Canastra National Park.
Interior Brazil Days 13-15
We will have three full days to explore the unique tableland of Serra da Canastra. Created in 1972, the National Park protects the São Francisco and other river sources, being an important ‘river nursery’ lying between two of the largest watersheds in the country, the Paraná and the São Francisco. This chest-shaped tableland (the shape is what gives Canastra its name), with higher areas reaching nearly 1500m (4900ft), also protects one of the most threatened habitats in the Brazilian Cerrado, the grasslands. In addition, the Canastra region also comprises other cerrado physiognomies like typical cerrado (savanna), gallery forests, ‘cerradão’, and ‘campo rupestre’, and the area still has some influence from the Atlantic Forest that is revealed by its semi-deciduous forest remnants. It is this marvellous diversity that makes the Serra da Canastra such a special place.
Emblematic mammals are part of the fauna of the national park, with regular sightings of the splendid Giant Anteater and Pampas Deer. There is even a slim chance for a Maned Wolf.
Birding in Canastra is divided into two parts: the open habitats of the high grassland plateau and the much lower foothills and surroundings, which mostly involve more forested, riverine habitats.
The clear river waters of the Canastra region hold the largest population of the super-rare and critically endangered endemic Brazilian Merganser, with about two hundred birds estimated to be present in the greater Canastra region (IUCN, 2020). Watching this shy and rare bird is a dream for every birder, but the search for it can be prolonged, and that is why we allow extra time if necessary, with three full days in the area. This is definitely one we don’t want to miss!
During the dry season (from June to October) the chances of finding Brazilian Merganser are generally higher in the lower part of the Canastra region, so we shall check favoured areas along the Sao Francisco and other rivers. The density of the mergansers is low, and they can hide away in inaccessible stretches of the main rivers or up smaller tributaries, so persistence is often necessary!
The merganser aside, we will have a large list of birds to look for in Canastra during these days. Some of our most important targets here are the endemic Stripe-breasted Starthroat and Brasilia Tapaculo, and such near-endemics as Lesser Nothura (a retiring species that can be hard to see or flush), Campo Miner (an uncommon species that favours burnt areas of savanna), Planalto Foliage-gleaner (another uncommon species) and Ochre-breasted Pipit (we will be at Canastra when these shy birds are in display flight and so easier to locate). There are also some important restricted-range specialities, including the wonderful Cock-tailed Tyrant, Stripe-tailed Yellow Finch and Black-masked Finch.
The endemic Dwarf Tinamou, a species that lives in holes excavated by armadillos, is quite widespread in the grasslands. We are likely to hear them calling, but seeing one of these tiny creatures in the thick grass is another matter! The near-endemic Yellow-faced Parrot gets recorded here on rare occasions.
Other specialities that we should encounter at Canastra include the endemic Golden-capped Parakeet, Pin-tailed Manakin and Rufous-headed Tanager, the near-endemic Large-billed Antwren, beautiful Collared Crescentchest and Crested Black Tyrant, and the restricted-range Sharp-tailed Grass Tyrant, White-rumped Monjita and Pearly-bellied Seedeater. The endemic Yellow-lored Tody-Flycatcher and Grey-eyed Greenlet are also possible. The near-endemic Blacksmith (or Eastern Slaty) Thrush and the endemic Dubois’s Seedeater spend the Austral winter here and sometimes linger.
More widespread species we should encounter in the Canastra region include Greater Rhea, Red-winged Tinamou, Spotted Nothura, Muscovy Duck, Buff-necked and Green Ibises, Western Cattle Egret, King and Black Vultures, Savanna and White-tailed Hawks, Black-chested Buzzard Eagle, Smooth-billed Ani, Guira and Squirrel Cuckoos, Great Horned Owl, the cute Burrowing Owl, Least Nighthawk, Sick’s Swift, Planalto Hermit, Swallow-tailed Hummingbird, Fork-tailed Woodnymph, Surucua Trogon, Rufous-tailed Jacamar, White-eared Puffbird, White, Little and Green-barred Woodpeckers, Campo Flicker, Aplomado and Laughing Falcons, Yellow-chevroned and Maroon-bellied Parakeets, and Blue-winged Parrotlet.
Among the likely passerines are Spix’s Spinetail, Plain Antvireo, Southern Antpipit, Small-headed, Highland and Grey Elaenias, Southern Beardless, Sooty, White-crested and Mouse-colored Tyrannulets, Common Tody-Flycatcher, Bran-colored, Cliff, Social, Fork-trailed, Swainson’s and Short-crested Flycatchers, Grey Monjita, Yellow-browed Tyrant, Masked Water Tyrant, White-throated Kingbird, Rufous-browed Peppershrike, Plush-crested Jay, Grey-breasted Martin, White-rumped, Southern Rough-winged and Tawny-headed Swallows, Grass and House Wrens, Black-capped Donacobius, Giant Cowbird, Chestnut-capped Blackbird, Purple-throated Euphonia, Grassland Sparrow, Hooded Siskin, Tropical Parula, Southern Yellowthroat, Sayaca and Swallow Tanagers, Blue Dacnis, Pampa Finch, Wedge-tailed Grass Finch, Green-winged Saltator, Blue-black Grassquit, Yellow-bellied Seedeater and Bananaquit.
More uncommon possibilities include the rare Chaco Eagle, Spot-tailed Nightjar, Sooty Swift, Robust Woodpecker, Sharp-tailed Streamcreeper, Rufous Casiornis and Masked Gnatcatcher.
While in Canastra, we should also appreciate the opportunity of trying the Canastra cheese, the best one in the country, and also the very good coffee produced in the area.
Interior Brazil Day 16
Today we will travel northeastwards to Cipó village in the Serra do Cipó, where we will spend three nights.
Interior Brazil Days 17-18
The Serra do Cipó is a beautiful and famous geological formation in the state of Minas Gerais, part of the more complex and larger Espinhaço mountain range that extends a thousand kilometres, mostly through Minas but partly in Bahia.
After lunch in our rather touristic village, popular with weekend visitors from the city, we will enjoy the afternoon in the hills of Cipó (at around 1200m above sea level), covering the typical rocky scrub (‘campo rupestre’) habitat of the hilltops, which is key habitat to look for three Espinhaço Mountains endemics, Hyacinth Visorbearer, Cipo Canastero and Serra Finch, as well as the restricted-range endemic Grey-backed Tachuri.
Adjacent Cerrado (at a little lower elevation) also offers a good selection of birds, including such near-endemics as the gorgeous Horned Sungem, Rufous-winged Antshrike, Black-throated Saltator, the stunning Blue Finch, Cinereous Warbling Finch and also the endemic Cinnamon Tanager.
Other species in this area include Small-billed Tinamou, Toco Toucan, Ferruginous Pygmy Owl, Checkered Woodpecker, Peach-fronted Parakeet, Narrow-billed Woodcreeper, Rufous-fronted Thornbird, Southern Scrub and Suiriri Flycatchers, Plain-crested and Lesser Elaenias, Pearly-vented Tody-Tyrant and Burnished-buff Tanager.
Very widespread birds in the Cipó area include Turkey Vulture, Roadside Hawk, Crested and Yellow-headed Caracaras, American Kestrel, Picazuro Pigeon, Scaled, White-tipped and Eared Doves, Ruddy Ground Dove, Yellow-bellied Elaenia, Tropical Kingbird, Brown-crested Flycatcher, Shiny Cowbird, Chopi Blackbird and Rufous-collared Sparrow.
In the early morning, we will visit the eastern side of the Cipó plateau, an area comprising grasslands and Atlantic Forest remnants, where we will look for some more target species such as Rock Tapaculo (another species endemic to the Espinhaço) and the ultra-skulking endemic Marsh Tapaculo, as well as some other interesting species of the area like the endemic Gilt-edged Tanager and the near-endemic Lesser Grass Finch, as well as White-barred Piculet, Mottle-cheeked Tyrannulet, Ochre-faced Tody-Flycatcher, Long-tailed Reed Finch, Yellow-rumped Marshbird and Hellmayr’s Pipit. Uncommon possibilities include the near-endemic White-shouldered Fire-eye and the pretty Rufous Gnateater.
We will spend the rest of the morning at lower elevations, not far from Cipó village. Here we will cover open areas (‘cerrado’) and dry woodland where we expect to find the noisy and impressive Red-legged Seriema, the endemic Caatinga Puffbird and Silvery-cheeked Antshrike and the near-endemic Pale-bellied Tyrant-Manakin, as well as Sooty-fronted Spinetail, Black-capped Antwren, Chivi Vireo, Flavescent Warbler, Chestnut-vented Conebill, Guira Tanager, Grey Pileated Finch and Saffron-billed Sparrow. With luck, we will also encounter the near-endemic Rufous-capped Spinetail.
From there, we have just a short journey to reach the beautiful cerrado in the hills of Lapinha da Serra, where we will spend the rest of the day enjoying the spectacular scenery and looking for goodies like the endemic and very localised Diamantina Sabrewing, the endemic ‘Cipo Cinclodes’ (currently lumped in Long-tailed Cinclodes, but so isolated from the range in southernmost Brazil that many Brazilian taxonomists consider it a separate species), the endemic Band-tailed Hornero and White-striped Warbler, and the near-endemic Curl-crested Jay and Shrike-like and White-rumped Tanagers.
Species of wider distribution include Firewood-gatherer, the wonderful Streamer-tailed Tyrant, Chalk-browed Mockingbird, Red (or Lowland Hepatic) Tanager and Plumbeous Seedeater.
Interior Brazil Day 19
This morning, we will take the Serra Morena road, mainly to check a few sections of gallery forest. There, we will be mainly looking for the uncommon Henna-capped Foliage-gleaner. The stunning Helmeted Manakin should also appear in the gallery forest, and some others like Variable Antshrike, Olivaceous Woodcreeper, Streaked Xenops, Greenish Elaenia, Planalto Tyrannulet, Golden-crowned Warbler and Grey-headed Tanager may well be seen.
Afterwards, we will travel to the Santuário do Caraça (Caraça Sanctuary). We will arrive in time for some introductory birding before checking in at the impressively huge monastery building for our two-night stay.
Interior Brazil Day 20
The Santuário do Caraça (Caraça Sanctuary), a large monastery nestled amidst the spectacular mountainscapes of the Serra do Caraça. The Caraça Sanctuary combines beautiful humid valleys with lush vegetated rocky outcrops and fields of ‘campo rupestre’, all surrounded by towering mountains.
Visiting the Caraça Sanctuary is always a memorable experience for those who appreciate nature.
Caraça is most famous for its Maned Wolves, and we have a very good chance of seeing one or two Maned Wolves coming to food placed right at the front entrance to the monastery each evening, in spite of the (mostly general tourist) onlookers who usually completely fail to keep their voices low or stop moving around! On occasion, Maned Wolves get spotted along the roads or in other locations during the daytime, but they are generally shy, and typically the sightings are brief.
Interesting endemic primates are found in Caraça, and the chances are good to see Black Tufted-ear Marmoset and Black-fronted Titi Monkey. Other mammals are likely to include Guianan Squirrel and Crab-eating Fox.
A large array of birds should be recorded during our time in Caraça. The reserve covers a large area and has various trails through the different habitats. The avifauna is very strongly influenced by the Atlantic Forest, and most of the accessible species at Caraça are characteristic of that biome.
While exploring Caraça, we can visit some good campo rupestre habitat. Here, we will have another chance for the localised endemic Diamantina Sabrewing. It is also a good spot for the very localised endemic Serra Antwren, while other birds of note include Hyacinth Visorbearer, Grey-backed Tachuri, Hang-nest Tody Tyrant and Rock Tapaculo.
Among the many other potential species during our visit are Brown and Tataupa Tinamous, Dusky-legged Guan (ridiculously tame here as they are fed by both the monks and visitors), Blackish Rail, White-collared Swift, the near-endemic Biscutate Swift, Planalto and Scale-throated Hermits, Glittering-bellied Emerald, the endemic Brazilian Ruby, the near-endemic Violet-capped Woodnymph, Sombre Hummingbird, White-vented Violetear, Hyacinth Visorbearer, Frilled Coquette (uncommon), Plumbeous Pigeon, Slaty-breasted Wood Rail, Mantled Hawk (uncommon), Band-winged Nightjar, Long-trained Nightjar (uncommon), Ocellated Poorwill, Tawny-browed and Rusty-barred Owls, Black-capped Screech Owl, Rufous-capped Motmot, Surucua Trogon, Green-billed Toucan, the endemic Crescent-chested Puffbird and Yellow-eared Woodpecker, Robust and Yellow-browed Woodpeckers, White-barred Piculet, Plain and Golden- capped Parakeets, and Scaly-headed Parrot.
Passerines include Lesser, Scaled, Planalto and White-throated Woodcreepers, Buff-fronted, White-eyed and Buff-browed Foliage-gleaners, the endemic Orange-eyed Thornbird, Rufous-capped, Spix’s, Grey-bellied and Pallid Spinetails, Sharp-tailed Streamcreeper, Rufous-breasted Leaftosser, Giant Large-tailed and Tufted Antshrikes, the endemic Ferruginous, Ochre-rumped, Dusky-tailed and White-bibbed Antbirds, the endemic Star-throated Antwren, Black-capped Antwren, White-shouldered Fire-eye, Rufous Gnateater, the endemic Rock and White-breasted Tapaculos, Spotted Bamboowren, Blue and Pin-tailed Manakins, Serra do Mar Tyrant-Manakin, Swallow-tailed Cotinga, Red-ruffed Fruitcrow, the endemic Cinnamon-vented Piha (but now becoming rare in the area), Greenish Schiffornis, Green-backed and Crested Becards, Grey-hooded Attila, Drab-breasted Bamboo Tyrant, Hangnest Tody-Tyrant, Grey-hooded Flycatcher, White-throated Spadebill, Southern Antpipit, Mottle-cheeked Tyrannulet, Yellow-lored Tody-Flycatcher, Sibilant Sirystes, the endemic Velvety Black Tyrant, Long-tailed Tyrant, Great Kiskadee, Blue-and-white Swallow, Grey-eyed Greenlet, Rufous-bellied, Pale-breasted, Yellow-legged and Blacksmith (or Eastern Slaty) Thrushes, Blue-naped Chlorophonia, Chestnut-vented Euphonia, the endemic Half-collared Sparrow, Crested Oropendola, Red-rumped Cacique, Red Tanager, Blackish-blue Seedeater, White-browed Warbler, Cinnamon, Palm, Magpie, Orange-headed, Brazilian, Golden-chevroned, Azure-shouldered, Brassy-breasted, Gilt-edged, Fawn-breasted, Rufous-headed and Swallow Tanagers, the localized endemic Serra Finch, Uniform Finch, Saffron Finch (the monks feed a veritable horde!) and Green-winged Saltator.
Interior Brazil Day 21
After some final birding at Caraça, we will drive to Belo Horizonte Confins Airport, where our Interior Brazil birding tour ends this afternoon.
(We will be pleased to arrange your internal flight from Belo Horizonte to your departure city in Brazil on request, even if you are arranging your own international tickets. )