28.12.17
Minnippi @ night
22.12.17
Anstead & Moggill Swamp
20.12.17
Minnippi
17.12.17
The ATT
(The Aleutian Tern Twitch)
13.12.17
Oxley
11.12.17
North Stradbroke Island
10.12.17
Minnippi
9.12.17
Moreton Bay
6.12.17
Slaughter Falls, Mt Cootha
4.12.17
Minnippi @ night
For
a last hurrah to try to get nightbirds on Mr P’s annual patch list we ventured,
once again, into the wilds of Minnippi after dark.
And
once again it was, basically, a dismal failure.
Cutting
a long sweaty story short – in an hour and a half we had multiple encounters
with Garden and Coastal Orb Weavers and their webs, a dozen or so Cane Toads, 2 Common Brushtail Possums and 1 Tawny
Frogmouth. Interestingly we also heard a weird, harsh, barking call
near the entrance to the Airfield Track and later identified it as a Koala – but we never saw him/her/it.
It
was a perfect night – still, very warm and clear, after recent rain…….but still
a bit of a wasted effort, emphasised even more when I came home and found a Tawny Frogmouth perched on my balcony
railing……almost a fuck you, Idiot!
22.12.17
Anstead & Moggill Swamp
On
site at 5.30 – a dull, damp, humid morning. The temperature still in the low
twenties even at this early hour, I felt the sweat straight away. It had rained
overnight and looked like it might again at any point – but held off for the
most part for the two hours I spent wandering the tracks.
Birds
were quite vocal – the hearing aids just brilliant – but numbers of small birds
very low and range of species a bit limited.
Highlights
included a two small flocks of White-throated
Needletails heading sort of west, totalling approx 10 birds.
5 Channel-billed Cuckoos doing the
pterodactyl thing flying around above the canopy calling raucously – man, they
are just brilliant birds!
Several
Cicadabirds calling (look at me!)
4 Australian King Parrots
One
Common Bronzewing
2 Brown Cuckoo Doves
My
fourth Brown Thornbill for site
And
a new bird – very brief view of a Black
Kite near the powerlines.
Another
new species (for me for site) was a surprise, a female Red Deer crossed the track early on and stood briefly half hidden
before disappearing silently.
A
new spider as well – a Leaf Curling Spider Araneus
sp, unidentifiable beyond that thanks to Robert Whyte author of Spiders of Australia.
Leaf Curling Spider Araneus sp |
Butterflies:
only a single Monarch and a Large Grass-yellow – most likely due to
the ‘heavy’ conditions.
Moths:
a Brown Looper.
I
drove on to Moggill Swamp, but, once again, didn’t even get out of the car. The
right hand side completely overgrown and not even a Swamphen in sight. The left
hand side completely dry.
20.12.17
Minnippi
A
hot bright morning, even at 5.45. Bird-wise not too bad, but not much to write
home about.
A
single low-flying White-throated
Needletail just outside the M1 track again, but the track itself average. 1
Whiskered Tern lingered over the
pond and a Comb-crested Jacana was
my first on site since January 2015 - I let Mr P know for his annual patch
list. Two Water Dragons and 2 Macquaire Turtles near the boardwalk
and a single Hardhead.
It
was 24 degrees at 6.30 and I ploughed on down the Airfield Track.
In
an Orb Weaver’s net three cicadas struggled. I rescued them, took photos and,
thanks to Lindsay Popple, whom I contacted via his excellent Australian Cicadas
website, were identified as a female Yellowbelly
Psaltoda harrisii and a male Clanger Psaltoda claripennis.
Clanger Psaltoda claripennis. |
Clanger Psaltoda claripennis. |
Clanger Psaltoda claripennis. |
Yellowbelly Psaltoda harrisii |
Yellowbelly Psaltoda harrisii |
Other
than that it was only butterflies – the usual Monarchs, a Blue Triangle, Common
Crows, Large Grass-yellow, Common Grass-blue and a new one – flying high
among the she-oaks on the Airfield Track I managed to get some crappy photos of
what I believe was a Large Purple Line-blue
Nacaduba berenice.
At
the Raptor Lookout a high flying flock of approx 10 Needletails were the only
birds of interest and two Green Tree
Frogs called briefly from the big fig tree.
Dragonflies:
a Blue Skimmer and a Graphic Flutterer.
17.12.17
The ATT
(The Aleutian Tern Twitch)
Tuesday
12th and word came out that Aleutian Terns had been found at Old Bar
in NSW.
WTF??
ALEUTIAN TERNS?
Well,
I reckon that was most people’s reaction.
It
transpired that in October 2016 a local birder had taken pictures of at least 2
terns – but had not identified them till sometime this year. He had gone back
to the same location to check this year and found a flock of, initially,
thirteen birds.
WTF??
13??? Thirteen??
Anyway
– over the following few days two things had happened:
1.
A
number of people had visited the site and photos and discussion developed
rapidly - as did the tern numbers, increasing to 15.
2.
And
I contacted Andy J and we started planning at twitch.
Obviously
both these occurrences were of equal importance…..
So
at 3.30am on a warm Sunday morning after just a couple of hours of dubious
sleep Mr J picked me up and we set off.
It
was a 628km, 7 hour, drive, give or take, including a stop for a Macker’s
breakfast an absolutely non-negotiable on a twitch, to reach Old Bar and locate
the car park behind the beach. Then, loaded up with cameras, bins and scopes,
we trudged north 1 km up the beach to where a creek reached, but had not
breached, the beach.
We
found a group of birders – about 8 – looking at a sand bar about 100 meters
away across a too-deep-to-wade channel. On the sandbar: 2 Aleutian Terns. We set up, checked
them out and I suggested we head home now?
Over
the next hour and a half 3 more Terns appeared and settled down to preen and
sunbathe. In my humble opinion they look most like Common Terns and, I would
suggest, may well have been overlooked by observers elsewhere when scanning
flocks. It seems a stretch that 15 birds have travelled all the way down the
eastern seaboard to this unremarkable location passing what would seem to be
dozens of similar sites? We reckoned it will only be a matter of time before
others are located elsewhere.
To
my mind the salient facts were:
very
long primary projection when at rest,
sooty
rather than dark black ‘non-breeding’ type cap, white gap between the eye and
the cap and the latter set further back on the head than Common (of which there
were a few nearby).
A
strong, longer and deeper wingbar than the Common’s when at rest and
shorter
legs – reminiscent of Artic tern.
A
black bill that seemed slimmer and ‘finer’ than Common, but the distance made
it difficult to be precise.
We
did see them in flight briefly and noted the black edge to the rear of the wing
– but most of the time they simply sat and…..well, sat. I would have liked to
see their flight jizz but they just weren’t moving around much.
I
took photos but they’re pretty shit.
The Twitch - and Mr J getting as close as possible |
That
seemed to be it and we decided that, given the long return trip, we would head
off about midday. Just before we did Mr J scanned the sandbanks to the south –
about 200-250 meters distance - and found three more terns. I got onto them and
between us we found the missing 10 terns scattered across the sand. Their white
foreheads stood out like dogs’ balls even at that distance.
The interesting thing was, while we were there, a total of about 17 birders came to look at the terns - and this is the first weekend! A couple we talked to claimed they had 'just been passing' and it was convenient. What is it that some people avoid admitting they came to see the birds?
If you go to see the birds you're twitching!
Simply!
It almost seems an embarrassment to admit you made an effort. I don't get it - is a twitcher really that evil? (the same people had a similar excuse for going for the Laughing Gull in SA - they were 'nearby') Jesus Christ on a bike......
If it had been the UK they'd have been selling tickets and funding a new school on the proceeds.
We
headed home at 12.30, stopping at Port Macquaire for another Macker’s meal before
finally reaching my place at 20.00.
13.12.17
Oxley
A
good morning at Oxley. The track was pretty birdy and I topped out at 59
species plus a couple of butterflies.
I
heard (!) a Horsfield’s Bronze Cuckoo
half way along the track and a Mangrove
Gerygone on the way back. Brown
Quail were very vocal in the first 300 meters.
Best
bird was a Comb-crested Jacana – my
164th species on site after 155 visits over 13 years. It’s not often
I get a new bird for my local patches.
I
thought it might be a new bird for the site list but E-bird proved me wrong, 9
records, and someone else had seen this one yesterday so…….still a new bird for
my list!
Butterflies:
Monarch, Varied Eggfly, Common Crow
and Lemon Migrant (also new for site
for me)
11.12.17
North Stradbroke Island
I
met Paz at the water taxi in Cleveland and we boarded the Gold Cat for the 30
minute run to the island. The sea was choppy and I was hopeful.
As
we arrived at Pt Lookout the rain was bucketing down and we sheltered in the
bus shelter for about 10 minutes until it eased off.
At
the point it was 20-25 knot south easterly with a white-capped medium sea. We
settled in and immediately had flocks of Short-tailed
Shearwaters hammering south with scattered groups of Wedge-tailed Shearwaters accompanying them. The light varied from
horrendous glare to beautiful dark cloud shadows as rainy fronts moved through
overhead and north around us. We had to grab shelter a couple of times to avoid
getting too wet – me in my poncho, Paz in the ‘cave’.
The
passage eased off after 10.00, but we picked up 2 immature Brown Boobys and approx 10 Common
Noddys which kept Paz’s Australian list total rising and a White-bellied Sea Eagle flew in off the
sea with what appeared to be a Short-tailed Shearwater dangling from its claws.
A single Gull-billed Tern and a
couple of Common Terns completed the
bird list, while a big Loggerhead Turtle
and a few Dolphins kept it
interesting. A large skink appeared on the rock behind me and turned out to be
an Eastern Striped Skink – one I had
previously recorded at this location.
We
walked the gorge at 11.00 and retired to the café, that we used to inhabit, for
a late breakfast/early lunch and chatted through a couple of heavy rain
showers.
Finally,
at 12.40, we walked back down to the bus stop and tried for Little Wattlebird
before the bus came. Unfortunately we failed to connect, but Paz did dig out a White-cheeked Honeyeater as his final
tick for the day as the bus pulled in.
10.12.17
Minnippi
Mr
P and I hit the car park at 6.00 to hear, immediately a Brown Quail calling back towards the road, followed almost
immediately by a Lewin’s Rail
calling from the thick grass under the riverine eucalypts. The latter refused
to budge, however, but continued to call loudly as we crossed the bridge and
headed for the lake.
5 Whiskered Terns ‘still on’ or ‘returned
to’ , but little else in evidence on the water. The M1 track was pretty dead, a
few Evening Browns fluttered through the trees, a single Bar-shouldered Dove
and Sacred Kingfishers called and then Mr P tilted his head and said he thought
he heard a Horsfield’s Cuckoo?
Not
a common bird here at all – I’ve only ever recorded two and the last was in
October 2009 (with Mr D).
We
headed out to the riverside again, stopping only to take some really crappy
photos of a Purple-banded
Concealer Moth Chrysonoma
fascialis. (I include it here only for reference)
Purple-banded Concealer Moth Chrysonoma fascialis. |
Once
outside an almost instant response from, not one, but two Horsfield’s Cuckoos flying in, and around in circles high above us,
fluttering in a display type flight neither of us had seen before – a good
addition to Mr P’s Patch Challenge list.
We
walked up the Alley discussing, as it happens, wallabies and their allies at
Minnippi when, to our simultaneous surprise, we both binned a single Swamp Wallaby at the far end of the
Alley. Mr P managed some photos, to conclusively identify it, before it hopped
off. These too, are a rare sight in Minnippi – at least to us – and it was
shaping up into a good morning.
Not
much else happened back to and at the lake, apart from the dramatic absence of
any Duck on the water. In total we saw about 10 Black Duck during the morning but there were none on the lake at
all.
On
then up and over the hill and Mr P spotted a White-necked Heron drifting in to eventually land at the far end of
the Airfield field. Another good bird for Minnippi – especially, as I pointed
out when I had one on my last visit – for this time of year.
A Common Dore Beetle Geotrupes stercorosus wandering across the Airfield track was a
first for me for the site and later a Lemon
Migrant Catopsillia pomona also
achieved that status.
Lemon Migrant Catopsillia pomona |
Back
at the raptor lookout a Brown Goshawk
soared past and on the walk back to the car – the pair of Tawny Frogmouths were back in Tree B.
We
had a good range of butterflies in addition to those already mentioned: Common Crow (10) Varied Eggfly (4), Blue
Tiger (1 & only my second on site), Common Grass-blue, Blue
Triangle (5) and Monarch (1).
Dragonflies
included Graphic Flutterer (1) and Common Bluetail (2)
9.12.17
Moreton Bay
Mr
D picked me up at 6 and we met Paz at Wellington Pt station at 6.30 before
heading north along the coast to try for waders, despite the low tide.
At
Manly we had Whimbrel, Eastern Curlew,
Grey-tailed Tattler, Red-necked Stint, Bar-tailed Godwit and Pacific Golden Plover among the usual
shore birds, but the light was harsh and the birds relatively distant.
On
to Wynnum foreshore and much of the same.
Then
the boardwalk where we managed good views of Mangrove Gerygone, Mangrove Kingfisher, Striped Honeyeater and Leaden Flycatcher – all almost
predictable. Mr D spotted a skink which I am still waiting to ID and we saw a single
specimen of Mangrove, or Illidge’s, Ant-blue Acrodipsas illidgei - a rather rare and
restricted butterfly – and a new tick for us all.
As yet unidentified skink |
We
walked up to the metal hide where we saw nothing – also predictable – but on
the walk there and back had ground views of Brown Quail, one Double-barred
Finch, a couple of Chestnut-breasted
Mannikins, Horsfield’s Bronze Cuckoo
and a male Mistletoebird which Paz
got quite 'enthusiastic' about.
Heading
for the Port of Brisbane, due to road-not-working (why call it Road Works when it doesn’t?) we drove a
long way round to the security of the non-accessible wader roost where there
was bugger all anyway – a total waste of space in reality – distant Sharp-tailed Sandpipers, a Curlew Sandpiper, a few sleepy Chestnut Teal and one Red-necked Avocet viewed through the
fence the only real interest. The visitor’s centre did produce Mangrove Honeyeater which is always
reliable there – well almost always.
Lindum
appeared completely empty but between us we pulled Black-fronted and Red-kneed
Dotterel, Marsh Sandpiper and
two Black Kites to keep Paz on his
toes.
Then
it was Sandy Camp, by now after 10.00 it was bright, hot and humid and we didn’t
spend a lot of time. Just enough to get Comb-crested
Jacana, White-breasted Wood Swallow and Wandering Whistle Duck for our visitor.
Finally
retired for breakfast at a ‘new for us’ café along the esplanade near Manly
where the food was very good, the prices a little higher than our norm, but the
service a bit shaky and disjointed, resulting in free cake and scones which
also took a while – and a second reminder - to arrive…..
6.12.17
Slaughter Falls, Mt Cootha
We
met Paz at Toowong Shopping Centre and, after a quick Mackers dinner, headed up
for our appointment at dusk in the clearing above the car park.
A Great Barred Frog was calling loudly
from the creek and bang on schedule, at dusk, 3, and potentially 4, White-throated Nightjars appeared
against the darkening sky. Calling them in, briefly, we had good views as they
swooped around the clearing and called from unseen perches before disappearing
into the dark.
We
tried for the other usual species but got only one response from an Owlet Nightjar which we couldn’t see
despite extended searching.
A
few spiders’ eyes attracted our attention – Brisbane Huntsman Heteropoda
jugulans. We couldn’t find any possums in the park, which was unusual, but
did have Red-necked Fruit Bats;
however, a Brush-tailed Possum did show well on overhead wires
just outside Paz’s accommodation in Strafford.
4.12.17
Minnippi
Mr
P had been on site yesterday and reported several Imperial Hairstreaks on the
M1 track. I wanted to see more of these attractive butterflies – and get them
on my Minnippi list – so I headed out pretty late to give them time to take
wing, arriving on site at 8.15.
They
had taken wing all right – and pissed off somewhere else. Never mind it was a reasonable
morning weather-wise, although very humid after the rain and I walked the usual
circuit. Not much out of the box bird-wise – the Whiskered terns all seemed to
be gone - but the butterflies were quite good: Dainty Swallowtail, Varied Eggfly (M & F), Common Grass-blue, Meadow Argus, Common Crows aplenty and a Chequered Swallowtail was new for me
for the site.
On
the Airfield track a Garden Orb Weaver
had captured what appeared to be yet another Bottle Cicada – you never see one, then they’re everywhere – isn’t
it always the way?
Garden Orb Weaver with a ?Bottle Cicada? |
A
calling Asian House Gecko in the
Lookout shelter was also new and in a shallow, rain filled hollow along the
Avenue I found the spawn of a pair of amorous Striped Marsh Frogs. I’m not sure
how long the water will last as the pool really is only the result of recent
rain and will dry out well before the tadpoles reach maturity.
Striped Marsh Frog spawn |
An
Australian Hobby perched up in the
electricity pylons – it was a big bird and thoughts turned to Peregrine, but
nope, just a Hobby. Back at the car park and surprisingly a White-necked Heron was poking around
the edge of the long grass. Unusual in this area at this time of year I think?
2.12.17
Lake Samsonvale - cemetery
A
friend of a friend from the UK had contacted Mr D and we picked Paz up at 5.45
from his AirBnB at Stafford and headed out to Samsonvale for his first mornings
birding in Australia.
It
wasn’t difficult to blow him away.
We
stopped at the Glossy Black Cockatoo site but didn’t find any. We did however
have a number of common birds, of course, including a flyby Channel-billed
Cuckoo which had Paz almost in hysterics. A Channel-billed Cuckoo will do that
to you.
A
small ladybird-like insect on the bonnet of the car was a Eucalypt Leaf Beetle Paropsis maculate
– a first for Mr D and I and not the first insect tick of the day….
Eucalypt Leaf Beetle Paropsis maculate |
Eucalypt Leaf Beetle Paropsis maculate |
On
to the cemetery and the usual inhabitants. The lake was fairly quiet but there
was plenty to keep Paz’s head a-buzz.
After
taking brief shelter in the car as a rain shower moved through we headed in to
the Hoop Pine plantation and spent the next couple of hours finding stuff for
the visitor. Good views of Brown
Cuckoo-dove and Cicadabirds, but
best bird was a perched up Rose-crowned
Fruit-dove in the big fig tree, that we managed to get in the scope –
pretty spectacular bird really.
Mr
D’s eyes were on the money today. He managed to find not one, but two, big
green (what I think are) Bottle Cicadas. I’ve
asked my favourite people at the museum for specific help, but that’s what I
believe they are. We’d never seen them before so it was a bit exciting……
Butterflies
were pretty good too – Clearwing
Swallowtail, Orchard Swallowtail, Wide-brand Grass-dart, Large Grass-yellow, Blue Triangle, Lesser Wanderer, Common Crow and,
of course, Monarch.
We
retired to The Flying Nun in Samsonvale for a filling breakfast.
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