


The birds in the Pyrenees are fantastic -


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Europe’s largest and rarest vulture is fortunately a regular sighting in the Pyrenees.
The lammergeier is a huge vulture with a wingspan of up to 2.8 metres. It feeds almost
exclusively on bone marrow, dropping bones from a great height to smash them on the
rocks below exposing the marrow and breaking the bones into smaller pieces which
it then ingests. This unusual feeding behaviour gives rise to its Spanish name -
The lammergeier’s distinctive profile with its long diamond shapes tail makes identification fairly easy even when flying at great heights. It’s rusty coloured body is easily visible when closer and through binoculars you can occasionally see the tuft of feathers under it’s beak that gives the lammergeier it’s alternative name of Bearded Vulture.
Lammergeier nest in the high inaccessible cliffs of the area and can be seen in both
the Valle de Tena and the Ordesa National Park -

The majestic lammergeier
The griffon vulture is another huge bird with a wingspan of around two and a half
metres. It’s the most common vulture in the area and a daily sight on our walks.
There are large colonies nesting in the Añisclo canyon, the Sierra de Partacua and
on the cliffs of Riglos. The colony around San Juan de la Peña is particularly impressive
and an easy ridge walk gives us fantastic close-
A smaller vulture that is a summer visitor to the Pyrenees migrating to northern
Africa in the winter. The Egyptian vulture is distinctively coloured with a bright
white body, black and white wings and a yellow head. They have a rather unsavoury
feeding habit, specialising on feeding on the afterbirth of cows and in early summer
wherever you see fields of very young calves you find Egyptian vultures nearby -
A trophy sighting for bird enthusiasts, golden eagles are more elusive than vultures as they spend hours or even days motionless on their high perches where they are impossible to spot. However we do see them several times each summer. One family nests in the Valle de Tena with the young birds starting to lose their juvenile markings last summer. We had some great sightings of this group in the area of Col de Sabacos above Panticosa last year. As very territorial birds the area of the Ordesa National Park would normally only support one pair of golden eagles, however the abundance of wildlife (and therefore food!) in the park allows three breeding pairs to nest there.
The two other eagles we see are the booted and short toed eagles. Both are summer visitors to the Pyrenees that prefer the lower open meadows and woodlands rather than the high peaks. The short toed eagle likes to hunt snakes and has a distinctive hovering when hunting. The booted eagle gets its name from the fluffy feathers that cover its legs right down to the feet.

Egyptian vulture

Alpine Accentor on the peak of Garmo Negro
As well as raptors the Pyrenees are full of smaller birds. Alpine and red billed choughs wheel and play in the thermals around the cliffs of the Ordesa Valley. Many seem unfazed by humans as they scavenge around popular picnic spots.
If you reach the highest peaks you may well find an alpine accentor perched on the
summit -
Those with keen eyesight will see treecreepers running up and down the trunks of the beech and silver fir in the Ordesa Valley. They share the woods with serins, bullfinch, great tits, chaffinches, crested tits and jays.
Around the villages of Torla, Biescas and Panticosa dozens of swifts, martins and swallows take to the air at dusk to feed on insects and redstarts nest in the barns.
Although our holidays are not specific bird watching holiday Phil always has a pair of binoculars on him to identify anything we see and gets overexcited when we spot a lammergeier or golden eagle!
Also take a look at our butterfly gallery and wild flower page.