Spend the morning birding in the El Dorado Natural Reserve, located on the Sierra Nevada de Santa Marta, inside a matrix of cloud forests. The reserve sits in a transitional zone between lower mountain forests and higher cloud forests, creating a confluence of species from both areas. It is the perfect place for hiking and searching for endemic species over the mountains or to simply sit and enjoy the birds that visit the feeders overlooking the Caribbean Sea on the foothills of the range. The reserve is known for its incredible feeders for hummingbirds (some of which are endemic), tanagers, guans, and wood-quails. Return to the lodge for lunch then search for birds on the road near the lodge. Targets today include the Santa Marta Foliage-gleaner, Hermit Wood-Wren, Black Hawk-Eagle, Red-billed Parrot, Brown Violetear, Keel-billed Toucan, Greenish and Forest Elaenias, Social and Piratic Flycatchers, Rufous-breasted and Rufous-and-white Wrens, Brown-capped Vireo, Rusty Flowerpiercer, Streaked and Olive-gray Saltators, Yellow-bellied Seedeater, Crested Oropendola, Thick-billed Euphonia, and more. During the northern winter months, these foothills harbor a good number of North American breeding migrants, including Swainson's Thrush, Yellow-throated Vireo, Tennessee, Golden-winged, Cerulean, Blackburnian, and Black-throated Green Warblers, Rose-breasted Grosbeak, and Summer Tanager. Bird checklist review this evening before dinner. (Elevation: 5,900 feet / Accessibility: moderate to challenging; rocky, sometimes steep, unpaved road; hiking trails along the reserve / Temperatures: 60-75 °F.)