28.11.15
Minnippi
Nathan Rd wetlands
13.11.15
Sandy Camp & Lindum
12.11.15
Oxley
7.11.15
Minnippi
Picked up Mr D at 5.45 and met Mr P
at 6.00 in the car park. It was really good to be birding together again – it’s
been the rare occasion when all three of us have managed to get together - and
I needed to tell them of my pending changing circumstances.
There was a Bush Hen calling from cover near the bridge and, closer by, a
quieter call that finally resolved itself into a Buff-banded Rail. The lake was almost empty of birds – but very
full of water? Where from? It hasn’t rained for several weeks and there is no
inflow into the lake we are aware of……
The M1 track was quiet with only Channel-billed Cuckoos flying around
calling raucously, Sacred Kingfishers
perched up and a Common Crow (butterfly)
passing by….A single Oriental Dollarbird put in an appearance but
otherwise the activity was minimal.
The island end of the lake was,
similarly, quiet – Black Duck
numbers were down and the Hardheads,
Swamphens and Moorhens looked tired and sleepy in the warm conditions. The Tawny Frogmouth was back on the same
nest used earlier in the season – we were unsure whether the first brood
survived and is this a second brood? Or a replacement?
A disturbance among the smaller birds
had us scanning the surrounding skies for a threat and Mr D spotted a raptor
heading away across the lake – consensus arrived at Collared Sparrowhawk when it attacked something and landed,
distantly, in a tree.
Leaving Mr D at Stu’s Raptor Lookout,
as he was feeling the effects of the previous night’s Christmas party, Mr P and
I continued on around the Airfield track. Bird-wise it was pretty quiet
although a Forest Kingfisher and a Rufous Fantail were two good birds to
find – especially the latter at this time of year- and a Green Tree Snake on the track gave us both a startle.
The
butterflies, however, were exciting! I took photos and later identified Meadow Argus, Dainty Grass Blue and Stencilled Hairstreak – the photos
weren’t brilliant, but were adequate. Mr P spotted a moth and it turned out to
be a relatively common, but beautifully marked, species found from Cairns to NSW, but without any common
name – Donuca orbigera.
Dainty Grass Blue |
Donuca orbigera |
Meadow Argus |
Meadow Argus |
Stencilled Hairstreak |
A couple of Yellow-faced Honeyeaters and a pair of Oriental Dollarbirds in a new, possibly breeding, location finished
us off before our return to pick up Mr D.
While we sat in the shade I broke the
news of my changing circumstances and my new ‘role’ from mid-December – Retiree?
Pensioner? Unemployed? At a loose end? A free agent? Take your pick! It’ll
certainly give me plenty of time to do this sort of thing.
We retired to Belesis for breakfast
and further chat about Mr D’s recent overseas trip and my travelling future…..
22.11.15Nathan Rd wetlands
Recent reports regarding vagrant
waders were positive and, as I was in the area, I decided to check it out. On
site at 8.00 and started searching through the (approx.) 500 Sharp-tailed and (15) Marsh Sandpipers, 40+ Red-kneed Dotterels, 90 Red-necked Stints and 45+ White-headed Stilts. The reported Black-necked Stork was outstanding and
the 3 Glossy Ibis less so.
An hour searching and I finally found
a single Wood Sandpiper (2 had been
reported recently) hidden among the dead sticky type things at one end of the
flooded mud. It was difficult to see and impossible to photograph, but I
figured I’d give it a go from the other side of the marsh.
I returned to the car, drove back to
the first right hand turn and parked near the last house on the right beside
the open park area. Walking through the park I found my way to the ‘back’ of
the wetlands and slowly worked my way along the edge of the reed beds until I
re-found the Wood Sand again. I also found the Ruddy Turnstone in the same environment - an unusual bird in such a
setting.
I was settling in to await the WS
presenting itself in the open, when another birder appeared on the Nathan Rd
side of the water and methodically and indiscreetly picked his way around the
edge of the mud, successfully flushing all the birds out of the ‘sticks’ and
away to parts unknown. I wasn’t particularly impressed by this behaviour but
there was no point in crying over spilt milk so resigned myself to the fact. He
hadn’t even seen the WS in the sticks.
The day wasn’t a complete waste,
however, as I got a couple of shots of a Marsh
Sandpiper, a bird I have struggled to get successfully on ‘film’, which I
was happy with, and noted a few butterflies, which I believe were White Capers, flying through on the
gusty southerly on some sort of minor northerly migration.
Marsh Sandpiper |
Sandy Camp & Lindum
The eye surgeon was happy with the
improvement – but wanted to repeat the injection-in-the-eye stunt so I took
another day off work to attend to that – hence a second week day morning
birding.
With the current reports of vagrant
waders on the north side I thought Lindum would be worth a visit – and might as
well do Sandy
Camp at the same time.
A later start – arriving on site at
7.00 – I probably missed the best of the morning, however, it was still quite
active and I got a good list for the day.
The best bird at SC was a single Pink-eared Duck on the back pond
perched self-consciously on a log. It’s only the second time I have recorded
this species here and, according to another birder’s E-bird list, only the
second record for SC. I had White-throated
Honeyeaters down at eye level beside the second pond, although the light
was shit I managed to get some OK shots…
White-throated Honeyeater |
Walked around the BB pond for no
result but as I came back out onto the track a Leaden Fly perched up very, very close and I grabbed some shots
before it realised what I was and took off. The white chin is unusual I think?
Maybe a juvenile bird?
Leaden Flycatcher |
Back at the entrance way I picked up
a female White-winged Triller – I
couldn’t remember where the nest was as described on E-bird, but didn’t see any
sign of a male.
On to Fuller
and a quick check of the water – nothing outstanding, still 2 Glossy Ibis and an unusually dark duck
that I think was a juvenile Wandering
Whistle Duck.
Lindum and the usual White-headed
Stilts, Red-kneed Dotterels and Black-fronted
Dotterels. 3 Marsh and 8 Sharp-tailed Sandpipers also on site,
but nothing to challenge the northside vagrants unfortunately. Burnby rd was
quieter than usual, but I did see, and failed to photograph, a Blue Triangle fluttering around a small
Camphor Laurel.(Look at me – all
butterflied and treed up!!)
Then it was home and cycling into the
city for the needle-in-the-eye thing and a quiet weekend resting the affected
item watching the ‘medicine’ swirl around………
12.11.15
Oxley
An appointment with my eye surgeon late in the
morning gave me the day off and an opportunity to bird first thing in the
morning – so off to Oxley at 5.45. Fairly quiet morning – birdy enough, but
nothing to write home about. Monarch
butterflies were plentiful – I noticed as I pursued my ‘new’ interest.
Monarch |
Monarch underwing |
Surprisingly the Yellow-rumped Thornbills appeared to be using the same nest for a
probable second brood – assuming, of course, the first brood got away OK. They
were certainly in and out of the old nest which has increased to a considerable
size.
My ears seemed to be in good working order as
I actually heard a White-throated
Gerygone singing as I returned along the track! Note: this is the first WTG
I’ve heard voluntarily in years and it was a real ‘What’s that?’ moment. I suspect I have got lazy over the years as
others heard and identified birds before I got onto them. Lately Mr H’s visit
and, again, questions such as ‘What’s
that singing’?’ have pushed me to actually try and hear stuff – and hence
my improved ocular abilities. Maybe?
On my return journey a Common Eggfly gave me the opportunity for another butterfly photo.
Common Eggfly |
Common Eggfly underwing |
Mooloolaba Pelagic
Left home at 4.40am and arrived at Mooloolaba
Mackers at 6.00. Got a cup of coffee and by 6.25 was down the wharf meeting
with Stu and Paul W and hanging out waiting for the others to arrive.
The Cat-a-pult
finally turned up at 7.00 and we headed out into a choppy one meter, white-horsed,
south-easterly swell under a 15 knot north-westerly wind and catapulted ourselves towards the shelf
at 16+ knots…..2 and a half hours of bucking, slamming, heaving travel later,
during which we all experienced weightlessness, and which included a passing
visit from a couple of Common Dolphin,
we settled, slightly bruised, to drift the current.
It took a little while but soon enough we had Wedge-tailed Shearwaters and,
immediately afterwards, Tahiti Petrels
arriving to feed on the shark liver burley we put overboard. Later a couple of Wilson’s Storm Petrels, 3 Bridled followed by 3 Sooty Terns, 2 Short-tailed and a single fly by Hutton’s Shearwaters and, right at the end of the drift, a single Black Noddy. A large Manta Ray put in an appearance too.
Tahiti Petrel |
Tahiti Petrel |
Wedge-tailed Shearwater |
Nothing new for me unfortunately and,
coincidentally, almost all the birds I had seen in their thousands just a few
weeks ago on LEI!
We headed in at 13.00 and 2 hours later docked
back at Mooloolaba, having hung on for grim death through the returning spray-lashed
journey. A Brown Booby flew past as
came back in – another bird I had seen several of recently….sigh….now it was
just the drive home……..
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