To organize a visit here, please see my review post. Even if you aren’t spending the night, you still have to book a day visit with Aguas Manizales. Now on to the birds!
HUMMINGBIRD FEEDERS
Always a nice variety of hummers hanging around! I’m not sure which ones they are because I can’t match all their pictures but I found a few!

Bronzy Inca

Long-tailed Sylph

BANANA FEEDERS
Masked Flowerpiercer

Rufous-collared Sparrow

Blue Winged Mountain Tanager

ANTPITTA EXTRAVAGANZA
Albeiro has won the confidence of several different Antpittas which are usually shy birds and very hard to see. He offers them worms (part of their usual diet) and in exchange birders get to see them up close! Prior to this trip, I didn’t know much about Antpittas but now that I have seen a few, they are really cute birds and a real treat to see!
Chestnut-crowned Antpitta

Worms are served! It was like Dominoes for Antpittas!

Brown-banded Antpitta

Antpitta observation area
Slate-crowned Antpitta

A couple of the Antpittas were too shy to come out in the open –

FOREST BIRDS
In many cases the light was bad and all I got were silhouettes. Here’s a few of my better shots. My full eBird list is here.
Andean Motmot

Masked Trogon

Crimson-mantled Woodpecker

Great Thrush

Grass-green Tanager

Russet-crowned Warbler
Another Andean Motmot

TBD
Golden-plumed Parakeets
This was an amazing experience we owe to the dedication of Albeiro. We had already checked out of the lodge, moved to a hotel in Manizales and were out on the Paramo day trip with the driver he had organzed for us. Close to noon as we were back in town after birding the Paramo, the driver got a call from Albeiro that the Golden-plumed Parakeets were hanging around the lodge! We high-tailed it up to the lodge and there they were – in tree tops and playing with each other, so beautiful! We were able to spend a good 20 minutes watching them before they all flew off in unison. It was pretty cool how they circled the property a few time (making sure we got a good look?), then vanished into the forest. A most fitting farewell to one of Colombia’s top birding reserves!
