Ecuador Birding – Where Every Feather Tells a Story

From October 26, 2025 through November 8, 2025 I joined 5 other adventurers and an outstanding photographer and birding guide (Liron Gertsman) with Eagle-Eye Tours to Ecuador. This blog series highlights the animals (mostly birds), people and locations we encountered over the 14 full days in this beautiful land.
*Unless otherwise indicated in the image caption, all photographs (>99%) are mine.
**Best when viewed on full computer screen**

Ecuador Birding: Blog Post #1
Prologue to My Trip of a Lifetime to Ecuador

A Reflections of the Natural World Blog Post Series by Jim Gain


For as long as I can remember, the natural world has been my compass. As a child growing up in the 60s, I was given a set of Golden Nature Guide books—small, colorful volumes that opened entire universes to me. Each one focused on a different realm: mammals, birds, reptiles, fishes, trees and more. I devoured them cover to cover, again and again, the budding scientist in me awakening with every page. Soon it was rocks and minerals, and then the landscapes themselves—the Mojave Desert, the Florida Everglades, and eventually the far‑off places that stirred my imagination the most: the towering Andes Mountains and the vast, mysterious Amazon Rainforest.

Five vintage nature guide covers featuring 'Mammals', 'Birds', 'Reptiles and Amphibians', 'Fishes', and 'Trees', each with illustrations of typical species.

As the years passed, opportunities arose to explore pieces of these worlds, each adventure deepening my curiosity. Eventually, it became clear that it was time to turn my focus toward South America. I had already traveled with Eagle‑Eye Nature Tours and found their trips deeply rewarding.

A group of photographers, some with binoculars and cameras, gather outside a building in a lush green area, preparing for a wildlife observation.
Eagle-Eye Tour to Costa Rica

One day, while daydreaming about my next journey, I found myself browsing their offerings and stumbled upon a tour titled Ecuador Bird Photography. I clicked, I read—and I was hooked. What followed was a deep dive into everything I could learn. I pored over past trip reports, studied eBird hotspots for each location, and imagined myself standing in those forests, camera in hand. The trip seemed tailor‑made for my two great passions: birdwatching and photography.

After getting the green light from my wife, I placed my deposit. At the time, two departures were available—the first in October 2025, already full, and another in May 2026. I grabbed a spot on the May trip but let Catrina, our trip coordinator, know that if a space opened on the October departure, I was ready to switch. Less than a week later, the email arrived: a spot had opened. I didn’t hesitate. I jumped at the chance. The next three months became a joyful immersion. I watched countless YouTube videos, read trip reports, studied eBird checklists, and flipped through field guides until the pages felt familiar. I wasn’t interested in simply checking species off a list—I wanted to know them. I even bought a quiz app and made my own hummingbird flashcards, determined to recognize each glittering jewel before I ever set foot in Ecuador. 

Time dragged, as it always does before a long‑awaited adventure, but eventually the day arrived. After a smooth flight from LAX to Houston—and a tense lightning‑storm delay there—I was finally going to touch down in Quito just after midnight.

Flight map display showing Quito as the destination, with an airplane icon traveling over the landscape. Local times indicate 11:24 PM at both origin and destination. Distance traveled is 2266 miles with 98 miles remaining.
Are we there yet?

Dragging my suitcase behind me, backpack slung over my shoulder, I smiled widely at the “Welcome to Ecuador” sign as I stepped out into the cool damp Andean night air.

Colorful wall mural welcoming visitors to Ecuador, featuring text promoting great adventures and wonderful memories, along with logos of travel stores.

NEXT UP: An Airport Welcome and Arrival at Puembo Birding Garden

Previous Ecuador Birding blog posts will be linked below.

  • EB72 – Drawn to the Flame: Photographing New Birds at Tandayapa’s Moth Light
    At dawn beneath the moth lights at Tandayapa Lodge, we shifted from the previous night’s flash‑photography lessons into a challenging but magical low‑light session that revealed a Three‑striped Warbler and a quartet of Funariidae woodcreepers and treehunters. This blog series chronicles Jim Gain’s experiences with birds and nature.
  • EB71 – Freezing Wings in Mid‑Air: An Afternoon Flash Photography Class
    Our late afternoon at Tandayapa Lodge transformed into a masterclass in high‑speed flash photography, where we learned to freeze hummingbirds in mid‑air and reveal details the human eye could never catch on its own. This blog series chronicles Jim Gain’s experiences with birds and nature.
  • EB70 – Behind the Scenes: My Photo Processing Process — From Download to Gallery Display
    This behind‑the‑scenes look walks through my complete post‑processing workflow—from organized hard‑drive folders and Lightroom edits to eBird documentation and SmugMug gallery uploads—showing how each image travels from field capture to final presentation. This blog series chronicles Jim Gain’s experiences with birds and nature.
  • EB69 – Illuminating the Iridescence: Hummingbirds of Tandayapa Lodge Through Forest Light
    A late‑afternoon return to Tandayapa Lodge offered the perfect chance to capture hummingbirds in their natural light—iridescence glowing, wings blurring, and the cloud‑forest atmosphere turning every moment into a fleeting spark of color. This blog series chronicles Jim Gain’s experiences with birds and nature.
  • EB68 – More Colorful Songbirds at Guaycapi
    As the hummingbirds faded into the background, a fresh wave of brilliantly colored tanagers swept through Guaycapi Lodge, setting the stage for an afternoon of dazzling forest jewels This blog series chronicles Jim Gain’s experiences with birds and nature.
  • EB67 – Brilliants, Woodstars, Coronets and More: A Hummingbird Spectacle at Guaycapi
    A late‑morning surge of iridescent wings transformed Guaycapi Lodge into a living kaleidoscope, as a vibrant wave of hummingbirds swept in to claim the stage just moments after the tanagers faded into the canopy. This blog series chronicles Jim Gain’s experiences with birds and nature.

>>Ecuador Birding Blog Home Page Link https://reflectionsofthenaturalworld.com/ecuador-birding/

*This Ecuador Birding blog post was shaped and polished with the assistance of Microsoft Copilot, helping bring clarity and a consistent flow to my field notes and dictated memories.

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ABOUT THE SITE

With a primary focus on birds, each blog series has it’s own unique look at the wildlife and wild places encountered at different locations that I have visited around the world.

ABOUT ME

I earned my college degree in biology, a foundation that shaped not only how I see the world, but how I’ve spent my life sharing it with others. For more than 40 years, I taught and led in public education, helping students discover the wonder woven into every corner of the natural world. That same drive has carried me through decades of citizen science and conservation work. As an active member of the Modesto Camera Club, I’ve developed a photographic practice that blends natural history with visual artistry, and my award‑winning images have been featured across the Internet on dozens of sites and field‑oriented platforms. This blog brings together my passions for birding, conservation, and storytelling.

~ Jim Gain

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