The second hide was located just outside Andújar so it was nothing but a 10-ish minute drive to get there. But we started already at seven in the morning so there was no sleeping in. This wasn’t a full day thing, rather you’re there from 0700-1200 and 1500-1800, as there is no lynx expected in the middle of the day due to the heat. Mornings and evenings are the best odds due to the temperature (and, being cats, they have no intention making it easy for us in any way) so that was when the hide was active. This was a huge hide with room for 7 people with plenty of room in the back and a toilet, and no glass between us and the outside, and large floodlights lighting up a fairly large area outside.
Also, they had had sightings daily the last 12 days. So I decided to be carefully optimistic.
My guide didn’t stay as the place was fully booked, so we sat 7 tourists scouting for a cat that hopefully would bless us with its presence. The hide in Adamuz had a small webcam installed just under the windows and around 1000 I received a message from my guide who sent me a 1-minute clip from it showing a lynx passing by, jumping up on the raised platform and giving some serious close views from the hide. I informed him afterwards that while I enjoyed the video I would have preferred him not send it to me. It was simply too painful to watch. But wildlife watching is all about being at the right place at the right time.
The morning watch gave nothing but a few birds and you could start to feel the tension building in the hide in the afternoon. At around closing time the owner came by and whispering told us that we would get an extra hour as a lynx had been seen lurking around on his (extensive) property and it usually walked by the hide when it came from that specific direction. That got peoples’ attention and everybody tensed up. Silently, of course.
My guide seemed to have talked with the owner about my bad luck with seeing lynxes so suddenly the owner snuck up behind me and whispered just loud enough so everybody could hear to follow him as the lynx was standing just outside the door so I quickly disconnected my camera as fast and quietly I could from the tripod and hurried after him. Standing just outside the doorway he told me it was close and waved his flashlight. Looking out for a wild cat close I was focusing at 10 meters and beyond and couldn’t see a damn thing. It turned out that when he said close he meant close – the lynx was standing on a rock less than 3 meters away, not minding at all that it was being shined in the face by the flashlight. I got off a long line of eager photos before turning around to leave room for others and saw the rest climbing on top of each other all trying to see out the door.
Moving inside the lynx suddenly starting moving and everyone rushed back into the hide and we got to spend a few minutes watching the lynx passing by the hide in a steady pace. It moved from left to right and it soon disappeared up and behind us. Thinking it over it showed up a minute or so later with a rabbit hanging from its mouth, slowly moving out of the floodlights with it’s newly acquired dinner. A wholly successful night!