Home Reservations Asiana Club Travel Planner About Asiana
Reservations  | Departures  | In-Flight  | Arrivals  | Travel Guide  | Code-Share Partners  | Aircraft  | Route Map 

 TRAVEL GUIDE
 
 
 

 Visit Korea
World Cup Tours
Bird Watching
North Korea Tours
Pottery Villages
Protestant Sites
Korean Drama and Movie Sets
    Subway Tours
DMZ Tours
Night Tours
Buddhism
Museum Tours
Taekwondo
    City Tours
Experience Tours
Folk Villages
Catholic Sites
Beauty & Health Tours
Happening places in Seoul
 
 
 
Bird Watching
 
Where to Watch Birds in Korea: a few good hotspots..
Northwest of Seoul

Han-Imjin River
One of the most interesting, and beautiful, areas near Seoul, with a wide river, sand-banks, rice-fields and reed-beds. Follow Route 23 out from Seoul: the birding is excellent anywhere between the Ilsan IC and the resort area at Imjingak. Stopping at the road side is, strictly speaking, illegal (though this is an opinion not shared by an increasing number of hot coffee sellers and sightseers!). At the Imjingak Resort, park and climb to the roof of the restaurant block for wide views of the area and some of the more bizarre birding to be found anywhere nationwide!

-Star birds

With freezing temperatures, Cinereous
Vultures move south into Korea,
becoming numerous in the DMZ and
at the Han-Imjin River
Cinereous Vultures patrolling the winter skies, with a single flock of 140 in 2002, and hordes of geese create excitement throughout the winter. Other raptors include White-tailed and occasionally Steller's Sea Eagles, Golden Eagle, Buzzards and Hen Harriers. Winter surveys have shown that 40 000 or more waterbirds can be present too, with top honors going to the rapidly declining Swan Goose (with a peak of 2,500) and White-naped Crane.


Ganghwa Island
One of the most popular weekend destinations for Seoulites (being only 60-90 minutes northwest of the capital by car or bus), Ganghwa is becoming increasingly developed and accessible. Nonetheless, its wide vistas, from huge tidal-flats to strikingly green mountain ridges still contain many habitats and points of interest for visiting birdwatchers.

-Star birds

Bleak but beatiful: tidal-flat at Ganghwa
Ganghwa, especially near to the southern coastline is great at almost any time of the year. It is the best place in the world in autumn to see flocks of the globally endangered Black-faced Spoonbill (with ca 150 out of a world population of only 850 in 2001), but these are actually present daily from early May through to the middle of September, along with the elegant Chinese Egret which also breeds locally. In winter, scan the tidal-flats in the southeast for the massive and majestic Red-Crowned Cranes (14 were still wintering here in 2001/2002), while in April and May and again from July to October, the same flats hold good numbers of shorebirds, several species of which occur in internationally important concentrations. But Ganghwa is not only about waterbirds: scrubby hillsides, woodlands and rice-fields support good numbers of passerines, especially buntings. Japanese Pygmy Woodpecker, Varied Tit and Siberian Accentor are three regular species to be found here in winter too, adding further colour and quality to your day's birding.


Yeongjong Island
Although large areas have been reclaimed to create the Incheon International Airport (the arrival and departure point for the majority of foreign visitors to Korea), tremendous tidal-flats still remain only 5 minutes from the airport by taxi.

-Star birds

The center of the world's breeding population of the rakish and elegant Chinese Egret is here on Incheon's tidal-flats.
Remaining tidal-flats, particularly those to the south, often support at the right season large numbers of shorebirds (especially Dunlin and Great Knot, but also the occasional in both April/May and again in September and October) and small numbers of Chinese Egret and Saunders's Gull from April to September. In winter, there are fewer birds, but these include good numbers of the highly attractive Ruddy Shelduck, and small numbers of Red-Crowned Cranes in the north. Woodland areas are good too, especially those towards the northeast of the island, which can hold a broad range of migrants during migration, especially buntings and thrushes.


• Song Do
Sandwiched in between reclamation projects, and flanked by a major road (Route 77) and buildings, the Song Do tidal-flats in southwest Incheon (and thus strictly speaking, southwest of the center of Seoul), would hardly seem a great place to go birding¡|however, appearances can be deceptive!

-Star birds
rich muds here are among the most productive anywhere, and the tide line can hold many thousands of birds at the right season. Especially in winter, gulls take center stage, with up to 640 Saunders's Gulls in December 2001, and 143 Relict Gulls in February the same year. Shorebirds can be numerous, with several hundred Eurasian Curlews and several thousand Dunlin the most numerous, giving better views here than anywhere else nationwide.
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | Back to List

News | Downloads | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Site Map | Contact Asiana | Worldwide Offices

( Asiana Global Sites )

Korea USA Japan China Australia Germany Hong Kong Philippines Singapore UK