On 15 January we made day to the New Territories to explore birds and biodiversity. Here’s the bird list from the day:
Eurasian Wigeon, Mallard, Northern Shoveler, Northern Pintail, Eurasian Teal, Tufted Duck, Little Grebe, Great Crested Grebe, Oriental Stork, Black-faced Spoonbill, Yellow Bittern, Black-crowned Night Heron, Chinese Pond Heron, Grey Heron, Purple Heron, Great Egret, Intermediate Egret, Little Egret, Great Cormorant, Western Osprey, Black Kite, Eastern Marsh Harrier, Crested Goshawk, Eastern Buzzard, Eastern Imperial Eagle, Peregrine Falcon, White-breasted Waterhen, Common Moorhen, Eurasian Coot, Black-winged Stilt, Pied Avocet, Grey-headed Lapwing, Pacific Golden Plover, Grey Plover, Little Ringed Plover, Kentish Plover, Lesser Sand Plover, Greater Sand Plover, Greater Painted-Snipe, Pintail/Swinhoe’s Snipe, Common Snipe, Black-tailed Godwit, Whimbrel, Eurasian Curlew, Spotted Redshank, Common Redshank, Marsh Sandpiper, Common Greenshank, Green Sandpiper, Wood Sandpiper, Terek Sandpiper, Common Sandpiper, Great Knot, Red-necked Stint, Temminck’s Stint, Dunlin, Black-headed Gull, Saunders’s Gull, Black-tailed Gull, “kamtschatschensis” Mew Gull, Caspian Gull, Heuglin’s Gull, Caspian Tern, Domestic Pigeon, Spotted Dove, Asian Koel, Plaintive Cuckoo, House Swift, White-throated Kingfisher, Black-capped Kingfisher, Common Kingfisher, Pied Kingfisher, Grey-chinned Minivet, Scarlet Minivet, Long-tailed Shrike, Ashy Drongo, Azure-winged Magpie, Eurasian Magpie, Collared Crow, Large-billed Crow, Grey-headed Canary-Flycatcher, Cinereous Tit, Yellow-cheeked Tit, Red-whiskered Bulbul, Chinese Bulbul, Chestnut Bulbul, Red-rumped Swallow, Asian Stubtail, Dusky Warbler, Pallas’s Leaf Warbler, Yellow-browed Warbler, Yellow-bellied Prinia, Plain Prinia, Common Tailorbird, Rufous-capped Babbler, Masked Laughingthrush, Silver-eared Leiothrix, Japanese White-eye, Velvet-fronted Nuthatch, Crested Myna, Red-billed Starling, Black-collared Starling, Blue Whistling Thrush, Grey-backed Thrush, Common Blackbird, Pale Thrush, Red-flanked Bluetail, Oriental Magpie Robin, Daurian Redstart, Stejneger’s Stonechat, Red-throated Flycatcher, Orange-bellied Leafbird, Fork-tailed Sunbird, Eurasian Tree Sparrow, Scaly-breasted Munia, “taivana” Eastern Yellow Wagtail, “macronyx” Eastern Yellow Wagtail, Grey Wagtail, White Wagtail, Richard’s Pipit, Olive-backed Pipit, Crested Bunting, Chestnut-eared Bunting, Black-faced Bunting.
View of Hong Kong from Victoria Peak.
Wall text at Spring Workshop introducing Latitudes’ month residency.
Moderation(s) team. Left to right: Athena Wu and Mimi Brown (Spring Workshop), Samuel Saelemakers and Defne Ayas (Witte de With, Rotterdam), artist and ‘Moderation(s)’ curator Heman Chong and Mariana Cánepa Luna and Max Andrews (Latitudes). Photo: Spring Workshop.
Lunch break at Spring Workshop. As part of Latitudes’ ‘Moderation(s)’ research residency in Hong Kong we will be looking into how the city is articulated through specialist tours and attractions – such as self-made or esoteric museums, museum-like retail spaces, or “marginal” sculptural displays – both phenomena at the edge of the cultural, tourism and leisure sectors. Our first visit took us to the Hobby and Toy Museum in Yau Ma Tei, Kowloon (below).
Hobby and Toy Museum entrance in Yau Ma Tei, Kowloon.
Hobby and Toy Museum galleries at Yau Ma Tei, Kowloon.
Dinner at Lin Heung Tea House in Wan Chai.
Divinities shop around Shanghai Road in Yau Ma Tei, Kowloon.
‘The Palazzo’ residential complex in Fo Tan.
View from Leung Chi Wo and Sara Wong’s studio in the Wah Luen Industrial Centre.image
French toast breakfast at Leung Chi Wo and Sara Wong’s studio in Fo Tan.
Working table of Ho Sin Tung’s studio at the Worldwide Industrial Centre in Fo Tan.
Detail of Ho Sin Tung’s studio at the Worldwide Industrial Centre in Fo Tan.
Detail of Ho Sin Tung’s studio at the Worldwide Industrial Centre in Fo Tan.
Studying the map of Fotanian Open Studios 2013.
Fo Tan apartments looming over the forested hills.
Kam Tin river, looking for Grey-headed Lapwings.
Entrance to the Mai Po Nature Reserve.
Mai Po Marshes, the scrape.
Gate 107 through border fence towards the mangroves and Deep Bay, Mai Po Marshes.
Fiddler crabs and mudskipper, Deep Bay, Mai Po Marshes.
Chinese Pond Heron and Great Egret, Deep Bay, Mai Po Marshes.
1km of floating boardwalks, Deep Bay, Mai Po Marshes.
‘The Scrape’, Mai Po Marshes.
Cultivated fields of lettuce at Long Valley.
Mix of lowland, cultivation, abandoned land and fishponds at Long Valley.
Farm worker collecting lettuce at Long Valley.
Packing greens, Long Valley.
Long Valley between baskets and sky-scrapers.
Very green lettuce, Long Valley.
Highly equipped bird photographers.
Hong Kong Museum of Medical Sciences in the Mid-levels of Hong Kong.
Visit starts here, don’t get distracted.
Model of Kowloon tower block which suffered the worst outbreak of SARS in 2003.
Display of the Old Pathological Institute. “Medical students” c. 1912 examining rats for Bubonic plague.
Transitions in Midwifery display.
In the basement: traditional Chinese Herbalist shop ‘Cun An Tan’ Equipment.
Model of ear acupuncture points.
“Inoculation of calf with cowpox to produce vaccines against Smallpox” exhibit.
Flagstaff House Museum of Tea Ware in Hong Kong Park.
Display of tea pots introducing the history of Chinese tea drinking, from the Tang dynasty (618 – 907) to the 20th century.
Introducing the various styles in making tea beverage practiced in China at different times of the day and in different geographical points.
Compressed tea cake packaging.