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23 Mar 2022

What Katy Did next

It bit me thats what! As well as an abundant birdlife Australia hosts a huge number of other fascinating animals. Like this Mimicking Snout-nosed Katydid I found in our daughters garden. It gave me quite a nip as it uses its mandibles to crack open grass seeds to eat the contents.

The number of crickets stridulating in the early mornings and evenings was incredible and we rescued dozens out the pool every morning. The creek at the bottom of the garden wasn't only a haven for aquatic birds it was also used by numerous dragonflies and damselflies. Species I identified whilst there included Blue Skimmer, Wandering Percher, Blue-spotted Hawker &Wandering Ringtail.
Blue-spotted Hawker

Wandering Ringtail

Having a swimming poll in such a hot climate is a luxury we enjoyed on a daily basis with the grandkids. Putting up a large canopy over one end of the pool to keep at least part of it shaded we came across a small roost of a species of Forest Bat. I'm not sure which species as they're hard to separate but it looks as if they could be Short-tailed Forest Bat. Most flew off but those that didn't were moved somewhere dark and safer to roost.


The local town hosted a street food and music festival in the park one evening and we watched as literally tens of thousands of Fruit Bats flew out of their riverside roost to feed in the early evening.

Yabbys are native Australian freshwater crayfish that inhabit a variety of habitats  - including muddy dams and creeks. We found some in the creek at the bottom of our daughters garden whilst clearing out debris carried in by a recent flash flood. Cue much fun whiling away time with our young grandson catching Yabbys with a piece of meat tied to a length of string.


Yabbys live in burrows in the banks of creeks and dams and the evidence was everywhere when you looked for it. The creek remained full of water this summer but usually drys out. Yabbys survive the dry season by hunkering down in their burrows until it's wet enough to venture out again. This year there have been lots of flash floods so the creeks and dams are full and the Yabbys are thriving.

A trip up into the hills near the house not only resulted in quite a few bird species but also a number of animals  - including this Black Wallaby. One of several seen.


Lizards were everywhere including this juvenile Eastern Bearded Dragon that stayed just long enough for a photo. Most scuttled off before we'd even had a chance to identify them.

Australia is famous or maybe infamous for its spiders and quite rightly so. I just missed walking into the web of this Golden Orb Spider complete with newly hatched young! 


Were already planning our next visit to see the family and I've invested in a guide to Australian Dragonflies to help identify a few more species! 






14 Mar 2022

In a land down under

 It's been two years since we've been able to visit our daughter and her family in Australia. Since then they've moved house to a property with a large garden, a creek running through the bottom and lots of mature trees nearby. It has the added bonus that its right on the edge of the Mount Pilot National Park which is a hotspot for numerous species including the critically endangered Regents Honeyeater as they've been captive bred and released in the area. A whole new area for me to explore! 

Things didn't quite go to plan! Firstly severe weather in the UK meant our flight from Manchester was delayed by over five hours meaning we missed our connecting flight in Doha and consequently spent twenty nine hours stuck in the airport. Covid restrictions in Qatar meant we couldn't leave the airport and flights to Australia are still not back to normal so theres only one per day. 

Things got worse as even though I'd phoned Hertz to explain the situation they put us down as a no show so when we finally arrived, absolutely shattered, a day late there was no car for us! Cue a massive  argument before they eventually found us a suitable car! 

A two and a half hour drive later we finally arrived in Chiltern and collapsed into bed to the sound of crickets and frogs calling from the garden. 

It soon became apparent that the water filled creek at the bottom of the garden was a magnet for birds with both White-necked Heron and White-faced Heron being soon whilst the dam on the farmland next door had Little Pied Cormorant, Pacific Black Duck and Maned Duck most mornings.

White-faced Heron

White-necked Heron

The garden was home to a family of Superb Fairy Wrens and I spent ages trying to get some decent photos of the male. They're very quick and spend a lot of the time in thick cover and occasionally showed perching up and singing - generally when I didn't have the camera with me! 

Female Superb Fairy Wren

Sub-adult male Superb Fairy Wren



Other daily garden visitors were Red-browed Finches. These spent most of the time in the long grass around the creek or in the chicken run along with Silvereyes and a family of White-plumed Honeyeaters.
Silvereye

Red-browed Finch

Adult White-plumed Honeyeater feeding newly fledged young

Most days a Red Wattlebird and a couple of Black-faced Cuckoo Shrikes spent some time in the garden - usually at first light before the grandchildren and dogs were out and about. A strange looking rosella threw me before I realised it was actually one of the colour morphs of Crimson Rosella! 





Unfortunately any plans I had to visit local birding hotspots were curtailed when our ten year old granddaughter tested positive for covid on the Sunday evening before she was due back at school on a Monday. A PCR test on Monday confirmed it so the whole family had to isolate for 7 days. Luckily she didn't get very ill and lateral flow tests proved she was negative by Wednesday but we still had to isolate until we'd taken a lateral flow test on the sixth day. If that was negative we could resume normal life on the seventh day. Two days before we flew home.....

We ended up taking a lateral flow test everyday as we had to know the exact day we tested positive (if we did) as it would affect our flights home. Unbelievably no one else in the household caught it! 

I got into a routine of getting up early and birding' the garden before breakfast and again just before it got dusk. One evening, sitting on the wooden bridge over the creek and listening to the frogs, a rustling in the vegetation caught my attention and after a short while a Buff-breasted Rail dashed across an open space and disappeared. After that I staked the creek out ever ynight with the camera but there was absolutely no sign......

Until......

One afternoon we had a terrific thunderstorm and torrential rain. I'd already had a flock of six White-throated Needletails flying over the garden as the storm rolled in. When the rain eased I glanced out the window into the field alongside the house and saw two Buff-banded Rails feeding on worms right out in the open. I managed to sneak up to the boundary fence and spent twenty minutes watching them before a circling Collared Sparrowhawk caused them to scurry back into the creek. My best views ever of this native rail.








Both birds were juveniles proving breeding in the area and the record has been submitted via the local birders facebook group. Despite the setbacks I ended the week on 38 species for Amy & Jeremys new garden with other notable species including Rufous Whistler, Welcome Swallow, Galah, Sulphur-crested Cockatoo, Sacred Kingfisher, Brown Falcon, Willie Wagtail and Grey Shrike-thrush and Yellow-rumped Thornbill being seen along with the ubiquitous Australian Magpie and Magpie Larks. 

Unfortunately I didn't get a chance to check out the birding sites in Mount Pilot National park that I'd earmarked in my quest to see a Regents Honeyeater and the closet I got was this mural on the end of the public toilets in the town!

There is hope though as a couple of years ago a pair were seen in a nearby town. 
See detail here

If we hadn't have been in lockdown I was ready to jump on a plane with the pretext of going to see the grandchildren. Hopefully we'll be visiting Australia regularly again in the future so I'm still hopeful I'll see one! As I write this I keep looking at the fabulous drawing I've got of one by Australian Artist Rachel Hollis (see here).




Its one of those birds I really want to see in. 










9 Mar 2022

A well travelled Black-headed Gull.

 I recently saw a darvic ringed Black-headed Gull one of the pontoons on West Kirby Marine Lake ands thanks to Richard Smith of the Deeestuary bird sightings website see here I've got a complete history. It was ringed in Poland in 2013 and appears to have spent all its winters since then at West Kirby! A well travelled bird and illustrates nicely how far some of our wintering birds have travelled. 

Although a good age its not the oldest Black-headed Gull as that record is held by a venerable old bird over 32 years old.

Black-headed Gull TMEN

Below is a full history of sightings of this bird courtesy of Richard.

Black-headed+C220:F275 Gull

12/04/2013

 

POLAND (ŁÓDZKIE)

06/09/2013

West Kirby Marine Lake

11/09/2013

West Kirby Marine Lake

08/10/2013

West Kirby Marine Lake

13/01/2014

West Kirby Marine Lake

17/01/2014

West Kirby Marine Lake

18/01/2014

West Kirby Marine Lake

07/07/2014

West Kirby Marine Lake

09/07/2014

West Kirby Marine Lake

15/10/2014

West Kirby Marine Lake

16/10/2014

West Kirby Marine Lake

11/11/2014

West Kirby Marine Lake

18/11/2014

West Kirby Marine Lake

28/11/2014

West Kirby Marine Lake

16/12/2014

West Kirby Marine Lake

05/02/2015

Hoylake

07/02/2015

West Kirby Marine Lake

18/02/2015

West Kirby Marine Lake

09/10/2015

West Kirby Marine Lake

21/11/2015

West Kirby Marine Lake

04/12/2015

West Kirby Marine Lake

09/02/2016

West Kirby Marine Lake

12/02/2016

West Kirby Marine Lake

18/02/2016

West Kirby Marine Lake

02/10/2016

West Kirby Shore

01/11/2016

West Kirby Marine Lake

02/11/2016

West Kirby Marine Lake

29/11/2016

West Kirby Marine Lake

28/12/2016

West Kirby Marine Lake

09/01/2017

West Kirby Marine Lake

24/01/2017

West Kirby Marine Lake

13/02/2017

West Kirby Marine Lake

28/02/2017

West Kirby Marine Lake

19/09/2017

West Kirby Marine Lake

07/01/2018

Greenfield Dock

14/02/2018

West Kirby Marine Lake

25/02/2018

West Kirby Marine Lake

02/03/2018

West Kirby Marine Lake

04/03/2018

West Kirby Marine Lake

07/09/2018

West Kirby Marine Lake

23/10/2018

West Kirby Marine Lake

19/11/2018

West Kirby Marine Lake

30/11/2018

West Kirby Marine Lake

13/12/2018

West Kirby Marine Lake

17/12/2018

West Kirby Marine Lake

03/02/2019

Hoylake Shore

15/07/2019

West Kirby Marine Lake

29/07/2019

West Kirby Marine Lake

19/11/2019

West Kirby Marine Lake

03/12/2019

West Kirby Marine Lake

20/01/2020

West Kirby Marine Lake

25/01/2020

Thurstaston Shore

19/02/2020

West Kirby Marine Lake

12/08/2020

West Kirby

02/09/2020

West Kirby (off S end of WKML)

01/10/2020

West Kirby Marine Lake

28/11/2020

West Kirby Marine Lake

12/02/2021

West Kirby Marine Lake

20/07/2021

West Kirby Shore

04/08/2021

West Kirby Shore

10/08/2021

West Kirby Shore

04/11/2021

West Kirby Marine Lake

27/01/2022

West Kirby Marine Lake

28/01/2022

West Kirby Marine Lake

09/02/2022

West Kirby Marine Lake