Birding Guide in Japan


Do you need more or updated information for your birding in Japan? Are you planning to go birding in Japan?

Birding in Japan is doubtlessly exciting.

In spring, we are attracted with contrast of pink by cherry blossum and light green by new leaves. When warblers and flycatchers arrive at the lowland forest, they add green, yellow or blue in the forest.

In summer, we can enjoy beautiful chorus of many song stars in mountain forest. (Right is a photo of Togakushi, Nagano Pref. where we can see lots of song birds, such as Japanese Robin, Siberian Blue Robin, Japanese & Brown-headed Thrush, Narcissus, Blue-and-White and Dark-sided Flycatcher, Grey, Black-faced and Japanese Yellow Bunting, from spring to summer.)

In autumn, we enjoy hawk migration by Oriental Honey Buzzard and Grey-faced Buzzard under the blue sky while we are impressed with a beantiful scenery produced by thousands of geese in northern Japan (photo right).

Thousands of ducks  are seen in winter in Lake Biwa where I often go birding. From the ducks, it is exciting to find rarities, such as Baikal Teal, Red-crested Pochard, Ferruginous Duck, Baer's Pochard (photo below) and Scaly-sided Merganser.

However, it may be challenging for finding the right birding spots in an unfamilar country. Above all, unless you speak Japanese, it is not easy for you to do birding in Japan. I, Koji TAGI, a Japanese expert for birding seen more than 400 species in Japan, am able to provide more information on your birding in Japan. While I have more than 20 years birding experience in Japan with good experience of guiding birders from many countries, including America, U.K., Bergium, Sweden, France, Australia and Singapore, I am able to provide relevant and updated information for you.

I also provide birding guide service for foreign birders for one or two days and for beginner birdwatchers for introducing common Japanese or local endemics, such as Japanese Pied Wagtail, Japanese Pygmy Woodpecker and Varied Tit, or for twitchers for searching more challenging species, such as Baikal Teal, Scaly-sided Merganser, Spoon-billed Sandpiper, Swinhoe's Snipe, Solitary Snipe, Japanese Waxwing, Japanese Accentor and Japanese Yellow Bunting.

I am also able to take you to the best location depending on the season.

The followings are popular birding course for my guests:

1. Spring in the  lowland forest - Japanese Green Pheasant, Ashy Minivet, Japanese Waxwing, Siberian Blue Robin, Brown-headed Thrush,Japanese Thrush, Short-tailed Bush Warbler, Eastern Crowned & Pale-legged Warbler, Blue-and-white Flycatcher, Narcissus Flycatcher and Japanese Yellow Bunting
2. Autmn in the tidal flat - Mongolian Plover, Large Sand Plover, Pacific Golden Plover, Long-toed Stint, Red-necked Stint, Temminck's Stint, Broad-billed Sandpiper, Sharp-tailed Sandpiper, Great Knot, Terek Sandpiper, Grey-tailed Tattler, Eastern Curlew and Oriental Pratincole
3. Winter in the lake - Bewick's Swan, Bean Goose, Baikal Teal, Mandarine Duck, Falcated Teal, Smew and Steller's Sea-Eagle

For your information, my birding result can be seen at the page "Field Note in Japan"

Are you interested in about birding guide in Japan? Please download from here the basic inquiry sheet then e-mail to me (trogon1968cocoa.plala.or.jp) with the form@
(Please change "" to "@" in the above-mentioned address before e-mailing.

Other basic inquiry or any problem for downloading the form, click here!


Spring Migration Autumn Migration
Winter Migrants in Japan Southern Japan
Ibaraki-Benten's Birds Birding in Shinshu
Shorebirds in Japan Birding in Japan
Birding Guide in Japan Field Note in Japan

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