31.5.15
Minnippi
30.5.15
Sandy Camp & Lindum
24.5.15
Minnippi
23.5.15
Oxley
The lakes were very quiet, a few Grey Teal and Black Duck, small numbers of Pelicans, Darters and Cormorants. A Whistling Kite put in an appearance and a Black-shouldered Kite fed on its catch on the power lines over the water.
17.5.15
Lockyer Valley
16.5.15
North Stradbroke Island
10.5.15
Minnippi
I picked up Mr D who had been unwell
during the week so we went for an easy one at Minnippi – suited me too, in my
current state of motivation or lack thereof….
It was much as last week, quiet and
quieter. The grass had grown even more on the airfield track and was very heavy
with dew – much to Mr D’s disgust and exclamation as his joggers and legs got
wet and seed encrusted.
The M1 track had a few birds on it – both
Whistlers, Grey Fantails and a dose
of Scarlet Honeyeaters. There were 5
Great Cormorants actively feeding in
the lake and the Black Duck numbers
were high at (approx) 75 – most probably surviving on the bread handouts of
children. The two Fan-tailed Cuckoos were on the airfield track again – although I
only saw one - and Mr D heard a Varied
Triller call, but it didn’t respond to playback and I neither heard nor saw
the bugger.
We stopped off for a while at SRL –
aka Stu’s Raptor Lookout – but saw nowt.
Breakfast was also at a favourite
spot – Belesis, where I increased my intake of processed meats with crispy
bacon and himself had a sugar hit with the pancakes….
Sandy Camp & Lindum
No one else available today so took
myself off on a later start to Sandy Camp arriving at 7.15. The local school
appeared to have a major sports day on with dozens of cars already parking all
over the road and boys running round in various stages of rugby dress.
Sandy Camp was relatively same, same
- nothing too exciting. I was unable to locate the Greenfinch of recent weeks,
but as I consider it an escapee I wasn’t particularly worried. Best birds were
probably a flock of 35 Wandering Whistle
Ducks that swam off the peninsula and a growling Spotless Crake in thick grass near the start of the track into the
rear pond. Motivation was low, given recent personal events.
On to Fuller and I took a chance and
boldly drove in with all the other cars to overlook the pond while everyone
else overlooked the rugby match. Mo one seemed to care. Nothing startling there
either – usual water birds, the water surface itself somewhat reduced by
overgrowing lillies.
Lindum next and best birds – 10 Red-necked Avocets – unfortunately too
far away for photography. Damned hard bird to get close to actually. From
Burnby Rd a Whistling Kite overhead
presented for a few photos and the wetlands further down the road were full of Grey Teal. Nothing else too remarkable,
so I headed home.
Whistling Kite |
24.5.15
Minnippi
I met Mr P in the car park at 7.00.
There were large flocks of Rainbow
Lorikeets in the trees over the bridge including a few Scaly-breasted. The lake itself was almost devoid of birds apart
from a trio of Great Cormorants
fishing together – possibly this indicates the presence of larger fish,
therefore there is less food for smaller more delicate eaters such as duck. A
large flock of Welcome Swallows
(c40) fed over the reed beds to one side.
30 Scarlet Honeyeaters infested the trees at the entrance to the M1
track and, at first it seemed quiet, however, a few Golden Whistlers showed as recently arrived winter visitors, along
with a calling Striated Pardalote and
a pair of White-throated Honeyeaters,
followed by a male Leaden Flycatcher
left over from summer. Olive-backed
Orioles called from a couple of angles and a few Grey Fantails kept us busy checking movement.
Walking up the side of the forest Mr
P spotted a flock of about 50 Topknot
Pigeons flying northeast at a high altitude and 3 mobile White-faced Herons led us back to the
lakeside. Good numbers of Black and Wood
Duck on the lake, a couple of Coots,
Grey Teal and the usual complement of Dusky
Moorhens and Purple Swamphens.
The airfield track had a small bird
wave going on with a mixed flock of Variegated
and Red-backed Fairy Wrens, Silvereyes,
Grey Fantails, White-throated
Gerygones and a Fan-tailed Cuckoo.
Further along and the only other bird of interest was a second Cuckoo!
Back over the hill, a rest for a
while at Stu’s Raptor Lookout without incident, then back down to the track and
back towards the car. A Brown Goshawk
was spotted briefly flying low along the river - it looked like a large female
- and, at the bridge, a tail flicking Buff-banded
Rail put in a short performance before scuttling back into cover.
Mr P had family obligations so we
parted company and I returned home to a good book and the couch.
23.5.15
Oxley
Mr D picked me up and we arrived on
site at 6.30. A nice brisk Autumn morning – clear and cool. We walked the track
with the main excitement centring on a larger than normal flock of Double-banded Finch – approx. 15 -
presumably a post-breeding flock. An Oxley bird-wave occurred at one point with
Golden and Rufous Whistlers and Grey
Fantails and a Shining Bronze Cuckoo
who showed well.
Shining Bronze Cuckoo |
Female Rufous Whistle |
A poor view of a Reed Warbler in a tree who then dropped into
the grass left us wondering, but we settled for an out of season Australian Reed Warbler taking
advantage of the caterpillars in the foliage.
A male Mistletoebird sat up for photos – something we don’t see so well
every day.
Male Mistletoebird |
The lakes were very quiet, a few Grey Teal and Black Duck, small numbers of Pelicans, Darters and Cormorants. A Whistling Kite put in an appearance and a Black-shouldered Kite fed on its catch on the power lines over the water.
We regained the car without any more
excitement and had breakfast at the Europa Café in Sherwood in true Germanic
style!
17.5.15
Lockyer Valley
It’s been almost two years since I
came out to the Lockyer. Seventy Five kms west of Brisbane, the breadbasket of
the state, a largely flat agricultural area with a few scattered lakes which,
when they have water in them, support a large number of wildfowl. It is also an
area known for raptors and 8 or 10 species in a day is not uncommon.
However, it is also known for some of
the more difficult species in SEQ and your day list is more what you didn’t see,
than what you did. In this case, for example, we didn’t find any Banded
Lapwings, Ground Cuckoo-shrikes, Babblers or Harriers. There were no Red-rumped
Parrots or Blue-billed Ducks at the Uni and we saw no Woodswallows anywhere. We
did still had a good morning with 81 species in total………
On the way in from the main highway
Stu and I had a couple of Black and Whistling Kites. In the past Black
Kites were a rarity below the range, but have increased in number in the last
few years – in fact we saw a total of about 15 birds on this visit.
We got out of the car on Banff Rd
near Atkinson’s Dam. Usually a spot for honeyeaters and whistlers, this
morning produced only Bar-shouldered
Doves and a pair of Pale-headed
Rosellas. A huge flock of Little
Corellas flew overhead as approached Atkinson’s Dam. One of the larger lakes
popular with campers, water skiers and powerboat operators it was,
surprisingly, devoid of human life on this Sunday morning. A scattered flock of
Whiskered Terns flitted over the
surface while a few Grey Teal, Wood and
Black Duck paddled around. The
opposite shore was too far away for accurate identification of anything smaller
than a Black Swan, but there didn’t appear to be much over there anyway.
We moved on to a pond on the opposite
of the road from the exit to Atkinson’s car park – private property - where we
climbed the fence and walked quietly through dry bush to see what might be on
the water. A Restless Flycatcher
buzzed in front of us and 4 Wandering
Whistle Ducks panicked themselves away from the bank. A Comb-crested Jacana at the far end was
the only one of the day and a pair of Peaceful Doves ditto, but there was little else of interest so we headed back
to the car and over Boyce’s rd towards
Seven Mile
Lagoon.
Peaceful Dove |
Not much showed along the way until just before the flooded
fields Stu spotted a flock of Double-barred
Finches and as we checked them out, a small number of Yellow-rumped Thornbills jumped into the picture, which was nice.
We continued on to Seven Mile itself
– heaps of White-headed Stilts, 4 or
5 White-necked Herons and a White-bellied Sea Eagle. Seven Mile is
essentially a flooded field and the grass was growing through most of the
watery areas, not much exposed mud.
On the road to Lake Clarendon, as top
off at Lester
Bridge as usual to check, hopelessly, for the long departed
Blue-winged Kookaburra. Further up the road two Australian Hobbys perched up on the wires for photos and a very
dark form of Brown Falcon got us all
excited until we reluctantly agreed it wasn’t a Black……
Australian Hobby |
On then to Clarendon and a walk out along
the dam wall. There were, literally, hundreds of Hoary-headed Grebes and probably at least 1,000 Hardhead scattered across the dam. The
water level was still high, but had dropped about 100 meters ground distance
since our last visit. Stu picked up two female Australian Shovelers and there may have been other species in the
distance, but nothing else was obvious.
We checked Janke’s Lagoon for waders? But none were on site.
Back to the car and we were both
flagging a little. I always get quite exhausted in the Lockyer, I don’t know
why, maybe its my age or the longer day or the environment, but I usually feel
knackered half way throught he morning and require some sustenance. So we
headed for MacDonalds and scoffed some late breakfast – and coffee….then turned
back to Gatton
Uni and Lake Galletly.
The usual numbers of Magpie Geese and Plumed Whistling Duck stood around the edges and on the island. Pink-eared Duck, possibly my favourite
duck, were also present in numbers and Stu found a total of 3 Freckled Duck while I searched, in vain,
for a Blue-billed among the Hardheads.
Magpie Goose |
Pink-eared Duck |
So, then it was time to head home. We
got slightly lost trying to leave the Uni campus, but did finally make it to
the road and the hour plus drive home.
16.5.15
North Stradbroke Island
I got the usual 6.55 water taxi from
Cleveland and settled back for a choppy ride across the bay. A 25-30 knot
southerly was blowing and the resulting sharp swells on the shallow water made
for a wet trip. The bus trundled around to the headland and I marched out to Pt
Lookout at the usual 8.00 arrival.
Two and a half hours later I packed
up and headed back for the 10.55 bus. A handful of Australian Gannets – mostly, I guessed, repeat observations of the
same birds cruising the coast looking for food – 7, in total, Common Noddys and a single Wedge-tailed Shearwater all heading
south were the only seabirds during the watch. The wind was right, having swung
more to the east during the morning, the sea was wild and messy and the cloud
cover enough to cut the glare comfortably, but the birds weren’t performing.
Not much else to and fro the headland
– a trio of Little Wattlebirds (this
is most likely the closest reliable location to Brisbane) frolicked around in
the canopy, but no Stone Curlews appeared in their usual silent stance along
the bus route and the tide was still fairly high at Dunwich reducing the
available mud/sand for the waders.
All in all a bit of a disappointment,
but, as usual, Pt Lookout left me feeling refreshed and re-energised.
10.5.15
Trotter
Mr D picked me up at 6.15 and we
arrived on site just after 6.30. It was cold – for Queensland – especially out
of the sun, it was quite chilly.
We walked the track towards the lake,
turned left and followed that track back around in a big loop, eventually
emerging onto the lake shore. The water level was lower than I expected, but
higher than on our last visit; it had been several months since I have been
here and I thought, with all the rain, that the lake would be full again.
So far in our 40 minute walk through
the woods we had seen approximately 12 birds. 2 or 3 Bar-shouldered Doves, 2 male Rufous
Whistlers, 1 (brown) Rose Robin,
2 Grey Fantails, a male Leaden Flycatcher and a Grey Shrike Thrush, one Yellow-faced
Honeyeater (heard only) and ditto for Striated
Pardalote and Rainbow Bee Eater.
We continued to ponder the reason for the paucity of species and numbers in,
what appears to be, a perfect habitat.
On the lakeshore things did not
improve much. A largish flock of Wood
Duck, a single Great Egret, on
the water a smaller flock of Hardhead
and a Darter; a few Little Black & Little Pied Cormorants, thirty Pelicans
and three Great Cormorants covered
most of a small island and 2 Gull-billed
Terns passed in the distance. In such a large body of water it was a tiny
number of birds. The shoreline held nothing, although a weedy grass had sprung
up in the mud, but, as walked through it, we noted that it held no insects
whatsoever. A White-faced Heron, a White-necked Heron and an Intermediate Egret stood around looking
hopeful, but hungry.
We turned the corner into the inlet
and found a flock of approx. 230 Hardheads
tucked into the dead end – one of the biggest flocks of single species
ducks I have seen in Australia. As we walked in they became nervous and
eventually most of them flew past us to more open water. An unusual sight in
Queensland but it still didn’t make much of a dent in the potential
environment.
Back up the track through the trees
to the car adding nothing new to the list; Trotter, as usual, bewildering and
disappointing.
We stopped off at Lady Marmalade in Stones Corner for breakfast with a ‘Gringo’ meal being the choice for both of us.
We stopped off at Lady Marmalade in Stones Corner for breakfast with a ‘Gringo’ meal being the choice for both of us.
9.5.15
Sandy Camp & Lindum
With the Port McDonnel pelagic, and
the subsequent trip to SA, cancelled and both the boys indisposed I headed for
Sandy Camp alone arriving at 6.45. A lovely bright, crisp autumn morning. It
was quite birdy but nothing particularly outstanding – there were dozens, it
seemed, of Little Friarbirds, a good
number of Noisy Friarbirds and Grey Fantails everywhere I looked. A
few trees were in flower but looked like they had been well hammered over the
past few days.
Little Friarbird |
Juvenile Noisy Friarbird |
A Whistling Kite, a Brahminy Kite (only my second site
record) and a pair of Eastern Ospreys
guarding a well grown fledgling in their pole nest completed the raptor count. I
wandered around the lakes and tracks finally bumping into the Keats, we chatted
for a while, then I moved on. A pair of Forest
Kingfishers hung around the metal shelter possibly taking up residence for
the winter and I settled for a video of a Brown
Honeyeater.
On to Lindum and in from Kianawah Rd,
but no ‘brown’ waders. The usual flock of White-headed
Stilts and a total of 27 Red-kneed
Dotterels – all looking sleepy in the morning sun. I checked the wetland
from Burnby Rd too, but still nothing of particular interest. A flock of 30 Magpie Geese honked overhead and
drifted down to land on some more distant waterway. I did add Black Swan to my Lindum list, that was
exciting…….not!
Oxley - A White-faced Heron perched up
and the sun shone down the track
2.5.15
Toohey Forest
Friday afternoon/evening – horrendous rain and flooding over SEQ. A huge low pressure system swung in off the ocean and dumped biblical amounts of water onto the coastal areas inland for about 40 kms. Rivers flash flooded, roads cut, cars abandoned, people drowned. I cycled home in it and, despite a couple of detours, got home by 5pm, numbers of other travellers were stuck for hours in traffic chaos and disruption.
So on Saturday morning, it being a bright and sunny follow up, Mr D and I went to Toohey for a casual morning’s birding. Nothing very exciting, but that’s Toohey. Occasionally it throws up a surprise, but its rare – and today was not one of those days. We did have a pair of Brown Goshawks hunting quietly through the trees, a Rose Robin high in a tree, and a drive around the cemetery grounds added several embarrassingly common species to my site list, but there was little to write home about in reality.
We retired to the Leaf café at Tarragindi for breakfast. Higher priced than we usually pay, average service – but the coffee was very good.
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