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Where to find the bird it took David Attenborough 28 years to see

Freetown, Sierra Leone's bustling capital - This content is subject to copyright.
Freetown, Sierra Leone's bustling capital - This content is subject to copyright.

Katie Parry wins our Just Back travel writing competition - and £250 - for her account of a curious day of birdwatching.

Love can take you in many directions. Including, it seems, to a parched corner of Sierra Leone’s only golf course at 6am on a Sunday. I have just started dating a blue-eyed South African. Since I am also 22, I have yet to learn that you can love someone without loving their hobbies.

Which means I am now a devoted birdwatcher. I am learning that not all birds that soar and wheedle over the dugout canoes that speckle the ocean are seagulls, that sunbirds sing most beautifully in the first silent minutes after a June rainstorm, and that the ducking and diving of the stiff-winged swift provokes an answering swoop in my own stomach.

'The avian holy grail, however, is the picathartes' - Credit: Fotolia/AP
'The avian holy grail, however, is the picathartes' Credit: Fotolia/AP

The avian holy grail, however, is the picathartes. This incredibly rare bird looks like a rather startled anorexic pheasant made of black Plasticine, but fortunately love is blind. We search for it whenever we can, slotting our limbs like pieces of a jigsaw into the over-crowded minibuses that wend their way outwards from the laughing, colourful streets of Freetown.

One journey brings us to the Liberian border, just as the sun is rising. Even at this hour the thick, dark forest pulses with heat, and a miasma of leafmould permeates every thought. Each branch hides vicious thorns, and as we stoop to wait under a boulder the cool moss soothes the ragged skin of my fingers.

The best birdwatching holidays: a month-by-month guide
The best birdwatching holidays: a month-by-month guide

The hours inch past. We see nothing. This may be due to our guide, Kenneth, who periodically brings his flip-flop down with a resounding THWACK on some tree trunk or body part, before pausing to admire whatever vaguely insect-shaped smudge he has created. My boyfriend bristles, and gives Kenneth a small leafy branch instead of the flip-flop. Kenneth is delighted. He ties it so that when he launches his next attack it makes an enormously loud, whipping WHOMP.

This, it seems, is the entrance music our quarry has been waiting for. She is unmistakable, even at 50ft. Her yellow head bobs in what is left of the evening light, and she hops from rock to rock cocking her neck thoughtfully, before disappearing off into the gloaming. 

The moody rainforests of Sierra Leone
The moody rainforests of Sierra Leone

We stay seated, frozen in reverent silence. I am struck by the idea that to this bird I am just another animal – another crooked stitch in the enormous rambling tapestry of the natural world. It is, surprisingly, a good feeling.

This is followed swiftly by another, smugger thought: I am clearly a better birdwatcher than David Attenborough, who had to wait until he was 28 to encounter the picathartes. I’m expecting a call from the BBC any minute now…

How to enter the next round of Just Back

Email your entry in 500 words (with the text in the body of the email), to justback@telegraph.co.uk. For terms and conditions, see telegraph.co.uk/tt-justback. The winner will receive £250 in the currency of their choice from the Post Office.

post office just back
post office just back

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