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Birding Tours, Yucatan Peninsula, Mexico: Bird Watching Trips & Holidays

Mexico: Birding in the Yucatan Paninsula (privately guided)
Birding Tours Yucatan Peninsula, Mexico: Bird Watching Trips & Holidays
12 NIGHTS FROM:
$4,867
Per person sharing
Scheduled flights quoted separately
7XPA12C
• Birding Tours, Yucatan Peninsula
• Cancun
• Cozumel Island
• Tulum Mayan Ruins
• Felipe Carrillo Puerto
• Calakmul Biosphere Reserve
• Uxmal Ruins
• Rio Lagartos
• Birding Holidays, Mexico
• Mexico: Bird Watching Trips

Our tailor-made birding tours in the Yucatan Peninsula, Mexico are privately guided by an expert local birding guide. Our bird watching trips & holidays start from Cancun, visiting Cozumel Island & Tulum on the Mayan Riviera with its outstanding birding & famous Mayan ruins. We then head  inland to Felipe Carrillo Puerto and Xpujil, where we bird in the secluded Calakmul Biosphere Reserve, before continuing to Uxmal and Rio Lagartos, then return to Cancun.

Day 1
You will be met at Cancun Airport and transferred to your hotel conveniently located near the airport..
 
Situated on the northeast coast of the Yucatan Peninsula, this popular holiday city is the gateway to the Caribbean resorts of the Mayan Riviera. Check in, settle in and relax in this tropical paradise.
Day 2
This morning you birding guide will collect you from your Cancun hotel and drive you 45-minutes to the port town of Puerto Morelos, where we will spend the morning birding in this former fishing village situated on the Caribbean coast.
 
Depending on the Cozumel ferry timetable, if there is time we will also explore the Cenotes Route in Puerto Morelos, with an included boxed picnic lunch.
 
We then continue 30-minutes to Playa del Carmen port to board the 45-minute ferry to Cozumel, a small island close to the mainland that offers great snorkelling and the warm turquoise waters of the Caribbean Sea.
 
On arrival in Cozumel we check in to our hotel and go birding at the sewage ponds, seaching for island endemics.
Day 3
We spend today searching for more endemics, as we bird all the hot spots on the small island of Cozumel.
 
We also visit the San Gervasio Mayan Ruins, which are great for birding.
 
At lunch we take a break at an inviting beachside restaurant, where you can swim in the ocean before enjoying more birding in the late afternoon.
Day 4
We leave Cozumel this morning and take the 45-minute ferry back to Playa del Carmen on the mainland.
 
From here we drive 1-hour further south to the amazing Tulum Ruins, a stunning 13th-century walled Mayan archaeological site that overlooks the sea. It incorporates a clifftop 'Castillo' (built as a watchtower) and the 'Templo de las Pinturas' with its partially restored mural. Not only are the ruins impressive, the birding throughout the ruins is also good, especially if we get there early.
 
After an included lunch in Tulum we head inland, driving 1-hour to Felipe Carrillo Puerto, the largest town in the state of Quintana Roo. Enjoy birding in good habitats along the way, before we check in to our hotel in this off-the-beaten track location, where most residents are of Mayan descent.
Day 5
The jungle habitat along the Vigia Chica Road, just outside the town of Felipe Carrillo Puerto, offers us one of the best birding roads in Mexico.
 
It is a southern access road to the tropical forests, mangroves and marshes of the vast Sian Ka’an Biosphere Reserve, so we spend the whole day birding here along a flat two-track road, with very little vehicle traffic and the possibility of spotting lots of special birds and animals.
 
We will have a packed picnic lunch in the field today, to make the most of the day.
Day 6
Before leaving this bird-rich region of the Yucatan, we make an early morning stop at a small lake south of Felipe Carrillo Puerto.
 
After getting our fill here, we continue to head south for just over 1-hour to the shores of spectacularly beautiful Bacalar Lagoon, where we enjoy an included lunch at the water’s edge.
 
In the afternoon we continue driving 2-hours inland to Xpujil in the state of Campeche. The region is home to the Calakmul Biosphere Reserve and a remote cluster of Mayan ruins. It is another great birding habitat.
Days 7 To 8
As the ruins are over an hour's drive from our hotel, we will be up early today.
 
The birding along the entrance road to the Calakmul Biosphere Reserve can be fantastic and we will spend a lot of time birding in this are that is rich in biodiversity. In the afternoon we will visit the ruins, which will require quite a bit of walking.
 
To maximize our time in this amazing jungle, we will have a packed field lunch and continue birding throughout the day.
Day 9
Although today will be mostly a travel day, before we leave Xpujil we spend some time birding in the hotel grounds.
 
We then drive 4-hours to Uxmal, making at least two stops along the way to bird at Santa Lucia Lagoon and in the seaside town of Champoton on the Gulf of Mexico, where we will have an included lunch. The variety of birds found today will mostly fall into the water birds category.
 
Depending on our arrival time in Uxmal (meaning 'built in three stages'), we can also do some birding around the hotel grounds.
Day 10
We start off early this morning with a walk to the small San Simon community, who live off the land in the same way that their Mayan ancenstors did..
 
We then visit the Uxmal Archaeological Site as early as possible to beat the crowds and enjoy the magnificence of the ruins and the birds inside. Uxmal was an ancient Mayan city known for its rounded architecture, intricate latticework and palaces arranged around patios and courtyards. These homes are richly sculptured and decorated with thousands of small polished stones, set in geometric mosaics. The key buildings on this archaeological site include the Fortune Teller’s Pyramid, the Governor’s Palace and the Quadrangle of the Nuns.
 
Afterwards we drive 3.5-hours to Rio Lagartos (meaning 'Alligator River') on the north coast, making a stop along the way for an included lunch. This small village boasts the highest concentration of flamingos in the whole of Mexico - with over 40,000 birds congregating here during the nesting season (March to June). Time permitting, we willl do more birding before dinner.
Day 11
In the pre-dawn hours, we bird in the desert-like coastal thorn scrub of Rio Lagartos Biosphere Reserve searching for the endemic target birds of this area.
 
We then head out on a boat ride through the mangrove-lined Río Lagartos Biosphere Reserve. With an eco system that includes jungle lowlands, savanna and mangrove swamps, this 150,000-acre reserve is the most important wetland in Mexico - offering shelter to 56 endemics such as the Yucatan wren, as well as nearly 400 other bird species, including residents and winter migrants from North America. In addition to flamingos you can hope to see the Snowy egret, Red egret, Tiger heron, Snowy white ibis, Roseate spoonbill as well as many other storks, ospreys, snakebirds and much more. These wetlands are also home to 58 mammal species; a variety of mollusks, crustaceans and fish; as well as the crocodiles that give the town its name.
 
Your boatman can also take you to see the bright pink waters of the Las Coloradas salt flats, where for over 1,000 years pink salt has been produced by the Mayans, who flooded these flat shallow ponds with sea water that was left to evaporate leaving behind pink sea salt. The colour comes from algae as well as tiny bright-pink brine shrimp that thrive in this super-saline environment. But be careful as the extremely high salt content of these ponds can sting your skin, especially if you have any cuts.
 
After a full morning of birding, enjoy a simple but delicious included seafood lunch, followed by a well-deserved siesta. In the afternoon we head back out for more birding for those who want to.
Day 12
If we missed any coastal birds yesterday, we will spend some time looking for them this morning before leaving Rio Lagartos and driving 3.5-hours to Canun.
 
Along the way we stop to bird the impressive but small and relatively quiet Mayan ruins at Ek Balam. If you are relatively fit, you can climb to the top of a Mayan pyramid with amazing views.
 
We also stop in the beautiful colonial town of Valladolid, where notable buildings include the 16th-century Convent of San Bernardino of Siena, with its ornate wooden altarpiece and the baroque-style San Gervasio Cathedral. Here you can shop for colourful Mexican arts and crafts, do some shopping and have an included lunch.
 
Afterwards we continue to Cancun where you will be dropped off at your hotel situated near the airport.
 
Day 13
Transfer to Cancun Airport for your flight home.
 
Note: A Quintana Roo State tourist tax (Visitax) is payable before leaving the state - approx 360 MXN (£15) per person. This can be paid online (www.visitax.gob.mx/sitio) before or during your stay, and proof of payment must be shown at the airport before departing. You can also pay at the airport kiosk, but this may involve long queues.