The last week of the UK as an EU nation found five of us in the south of France to spend some quality time exploring the magnificent Camargue region. The area is squeezed between the Mediterranean and the two arms of the Rhone delta and is made of up marshland with a huge salt water lagoon, the Etang de Vaccares as a centrepiece. I had wanted to visit this place since I first saw the name at maybe 14/15 years old in some (frankly strange) fantasy novels written by Michael Moorcock (you might need Google for that reference)
Leaving some of our party waiting for the owner outside our gite, a quick shopping trip to Arles to stock up with essentials (beer, wine, cake) was topped on the return journey by the site of thousands of starling gathering on the roadside telephone wires (and on the ground both to the side of and across the road) to such an extent that the wires were bowing dramatically. These starlings were to be a continuing theme of the week.
The first morning dawned….at least I think it did, there was so much rain, thunder and lightning, it was sort of hard to tell. Having sat out the morning in our gite (with one abandoned attempt to get out), the afternoon cleared and we spent a few hours exploring the edge of the etang. We found a number of common waders such as redshank, dunlin and grey plover, finishing at Fangassier, a major site for flamingos, of which more anon.
Day two really did dawn beautifully but turned very misty as we neared the etang. The mist did make some for some nice, atmospheric images and having stopped once of twice on the way, we pulled up at La Capaliere, a nature reserve and information centre for the Camargue. Graham managed to slip and hit the deck during the morning stroll (a once a trip occurrence for Graham) but the walk produced nice views of, indeed contact with the ‘other’ local speciality, white horses. We moved onto Le Badon for the afternoon, good for marsh harrier, and then drove back to Fangassier (having seen our second male hen harrier of the week). Fangassier produced for us with nice views of flamingo coming into roost.
For Tuesday, we headed into the high country to the north east of Arles and away from the Camargue. We stopped at Les Baux hoping for wallcreeper and alpine accentor but without luck. We did get nice views of firecrest in the car park however along with blue rock thrush and black redstart in the village. We then went onto St Remy hoping for bonelli’s eagle again with no luck albeit booted eagle was fair compensation. The trip into the high country perhaps wasn’t a roaring success but still pleasant and we headed back to the Etang de Vaccares for the sunset and a crane flyby past as they flew towards their roosting site which at this stage, we hadn’t quite properly located.
Wednesday morning saw us at the
Musee de Camargue which in spite of the name, is a nature reserve. We were
early but the warden wandered out and started to talk us through the site and
also where we might find that crane roost. The reserve itself was excellent and
gave us some good views of low flying cranes plus kingfisher and bearded tit.
You could also see how brilliant this could be in April/May with the mixture of
reed bed, a bit of open water and scrub. We returned back to the gite for a
mid-afternoon break, finding glossy ibis close to the road on the way back to
which we would add moustached warbler and great white egret the next day at the
same site. However, having stopped for a cuppa and cake, we were back on the
road for the crane fly in and got the parking spot on. The sight, and as
always, the sound, of thousands of crane flying in from all points of the
compass, some in small groups, some in long lines remains a wonderfully
evocative memory.
Our last day and we headed to the south western part of the Camargue, and after some nice flamingo view, finished at St Maries de la Mer with the sea on one side and the etang on the other. I Love a good gull (I really don’t) but yellow legged gull and particularly slender billed gull were good finds. Best part for me was getting close to black necked grebes, with that amazing red eye seemingly staring you down. The same spot gave equally close views of little egret and a common sandpiper.
Our week in the Camargue has, inevitably, made me want to go back (I haven’t even mentioned black stork and great spotted eagle) and explore this magnificent area in the spring. One day.













































