Today was to be the day we caught up with the wallcreepers on the cliffs at Alquézar.
But first a post-breakfast stroll in the hotel gardens showed it was good for finches too, notably a couple of greenfinches and as many hawfinches as I've ever seen in the same place:
 | Greenfinch |
|  | Hawfinch |
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It's only the third time I've seen hawfinches. The early morning light from behind doesn't do justice to the colouration of either bird.
When we got to Alquézar I must admit I was pretty much bowled over by the first views of the place - it looked stunning!
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Alquézar |
So after a brief tramp through the town we settled down on the seats opposite the cliff face for a full day vigil.
Quite quickly someone managed to spot a blue rock thrush, which of course I didn't manage to see until someone else pointed it out in painstaking detail. Once I found it the picture I got at considerable distance suggested I'd done the right thing by changing the camera settings. A first for me, it was to turn up periodically through the day.
Then around 11.00 am the wallcreeper was spotted at the far left edge of the cliff face, only for it it disappear behind the cliff edge almost as soon as it had appeared as the rest of the group hurried over to see if they could get it in a 'scope or camera. And I did actually see it, but just as a tiny black speck against the horizon that I could never have identified. Then it was gone behind the cliff edge.
I think we assumed it would return. When it didn't, we moved behind the capella to survey the rocks on the other side. Here there were quite a few things to be seen - a perching griffon vulture, sardinian warbler, and notably alpine accentor...
 | Alpine Accentor |
|  | Sardinian Warbler |
|
... whereby I'm only showing the warbler because it's the first time I've managed to capture it. It flew off before I went for the close-up.
After lunch the vigil continued. Various birds turned up including a lot of vultures on a thermal, a peregrine falcon, numerous crag martins, black redstart and rock dove.
At one point I saw a single honey bee near the foot of a wee tree where we were standing.
I had noticed that most people were surveying the main cliff and the left hand edge where the wallcreeper first appeared. So I decided to focus on the castella and the right hand cliff where it was known that the wallcreeper had landed on previous occasions.
Well all I got for my pains was more crag martins and blue rock thrushes, though it was fascinating to see how the ivy growing up the rock had been colonised by a mass of blackcaps that kept appearing and reappearing.
 | Blue Rock Thrush |
|  | Blackcap (female) |
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I think we jacked it in around 5.00 pm. I later jokingly remarked that we should have persevered for another hour or so but I don't think it went down too well.
In a later debriefing session, one of our guides pointed out that the alpine accentor was a much rarer bird than the wallcreeper.
You win some and lose some I suppose. At least I can claim I saw both, which not everyone did.