I like this pretty bird and it's the second time I found it at the same place
Cape Rock Thrush Monticola rupestris
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Male, Marakele National Park, 17 August 2014
Identification: Size smallish to medium. Iris brown; bill black; legs and feet pinkish brown to black. Male: Head, throat and upper breast bright blue-grey; back mottled dark brown and rufous (plain blue-grey in Sentinel and Shorttoed Rock Thrushes); breast and belly rich orange-rufous; tail orange with black centre. Female: Above brown, streaked black; face and throat mottled white and brownish; rest of underparts rich orange-rufous; tail as in ♂. Immature: Above brown, mottled buff; below rufous, mottled black.
Distribution: Cape Province S of Orange River, E Orange Free State, Lesotho, KwaZulu-Natal, Swaziland, E Gauteng escarpment to Zoutpansberg, Lebombo Range into SW Mozambique; also W Gauteng and SE Botswana.
Habitats: Rocky gorges, cliffs, boulder-strewn hillsides, scree slopes, usually with scattered low trees, bushes and aloes.
Habits: Solitary or in pairs. Perches on top of rock, bush or tree when alarmed, or to sing; sometimes flicks wings after landing. Forages mostly on ground, by hopping; attracted to burnt areas; also feeds on flowering aloes. Tame around human settlements.
Food: Insects, spiders, millipedes, centipedes, molluscs, small frogs, nectar, fruit, seeds.
Breeding: Season: September to February. Nest: Untidy mass of grass, twigs, roots and soil, with cup-shaped cavity on top, lined with rootlets; in crevice or on ledge of rock. Clutch: 2-4 eggs (usually 3).