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[personal profile] gemfyre
Before we begin - My Life list.

I'm starting to become utterly obsessed with this birdwatching buisness. I try to get out at least twice a week, and with 2 great birdwatching spots so close by (Lake Monger and Herdsman) it's pretty easy to do so. Unfortunately I can't afford to join Birds Australia but I can still attend thier walks and day trips and fully intend to do so. I've even decided to make up an Excell spreadsheet to keep track of what birds I've seen and where.

So today. I headed out a little before 9am to do the rest of Maurice Hamer Park that goes along the south-west shore of Herdsman Lake. Saw a lot of the usuals. Lots of Australian shelducks which weren't there a few days ago and two swamp harriers which I watched through binoculars for quite a while - very speccy.

I was near a stand of reeds when I heard a call I was unfamiliar with. So I quietly crept around the nearby trees trying to spot my quarry. I looked around in the trees and to my disappointment saw a wattlebird. I see wattlebirds pretty much every day and find that they seem to come up with some new bizarre call everyday so I was about to write off this sound as a new wattlebird call. But as I watched I noticed whatever was calling was still calling and the wattlebird was not making the sound. Then I saw motion in the reeds and looked closely - yep, there was a Clamourous Reed Warbler. I looked for these on my last visit but didn't see any. I managed to see two today. They're hard to spot and harder to watch. As soon as you figure out where they are and see them they move a little to hide behind reeds. So you keep watching that area expecting them to pop back up then notice movement about a metre away, same bird!



Accompanied by the ever present silver gull.








As I headed back to the car I was approached by a black swan. Some of these get used to humans and obviously this one was, he came right up to me and allowed me to take some great photos and as I drove away I noticed him across the road at the window of someones house. But the most alarming feature of this swan was its neck. It seems to be bent out of shape, you can see in the photos. He seemed to be getting along okay however. Wasn't tagged so I doubt he's had human assistance overcoming his "disability".









Herdsman Bird List

Black swan
Singing honeyeater
Red wattlebird
Pacific black duck
Australian shelduck
Australian shoveller
Bluebilled duck
Musk duck
Great crested grebe
Hoary headed grebe
Eurasian coot
Senegal dove (introduced)
Australian raven
Magpie
Corella (one of the short beaked species, not sure which)
Purple swamphen
Black-winged stilt
Magpie lark (on mud flats among waders)
Black-fronted dotterel (spotted many today, amusing to watch them)
Clamorous reed warbler - NEW!
Little black cormorant
Pelican
Welcome swallow
Sacred ibis
Glossy ibis
Willie wagtail
Swamp harrier
Silver gull
Little pied cormorant
Egret (white, not sure of species)


After leaving Herdsman I headed a little further to Perry Lakes - a pair lakes a little further south-east. I was kind of disappointed when I arrived. Both lakes are mostly dry and I there wasn't a swamphen or any kind of rail in sight (I'd read these lakes were good for spotting them). There was a bit of water in one of the lakes where I found a sole white-faced heron and a bunch of Pacific black ducks. There were LOTS of rainbow lorikeets here (introduced species). Two were sitting alone in a tree and I snapped a few photos.



Top left corner.



So I headed back to my car still happy about the reed warbler and came across a small burnt patch of bush on the lake shore. There was a kookaburra sitting in the tree.




What a moocher!



In another part of the same tree I saw what I thought was feathers. I figured "Eh, it's probably not." Most of the birds imitating branches that I see are actually branches doing damn good imitations of branches. So I rounded the tree, just to check... and my god. TWO tawny frogmouths just sitting there in the fork!! *bounces and squees* I actually have tawnies on my life list because I figured I must have seen one or two previously but this is the first confirmed sighting of them for me. I managed to get some awesome pics of these guys!!



I had to use flash because it was so dark in there. The front one turned to look at me and I snapped this - Devil tawnies!



The tawnies absolutely made my day.


Perry Lakes bird list

White-faced heron
Red wattlebird
Rainbow lorikeet
28 parrot
Pacific black duck
Magpie
Australian raven
Laughing kookaburra
Tawny frogmouth - NEW!

Date: 2004-03-15 08:48 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] aequanoctis.livejournal.com
WOW those Tawnies looks aboslutely gorgeous-and pissed! :D

Date: 2004-03-15 08:49 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] gemfyre.livejournal.com
Lol.

Yeah I don't think they were impressed that I woke them.

Date: 2004-03-15 10:42 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] khiseer.livejournal.com
*steals cosmos lorikeet coz they belong here anyway*

Date: 2004-03-16 06:12 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] kowren.livejournal.com
looks to me like he could have something around his neck but under the feathers?

Rails

Date: 2004-03-16 04:05 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] podoces.livejournal.com
I've found that the best time to look for Rails is right at dawn. Most Rails and birds like that are active just before dawn, and just after dusk. So, if you go out before sunrise when its just getting light, then you'll stand a much better chance of spotting one out-and-about. Coots and Swamphens and things like that are much less secretive, and walk around all the time.

Those Frogmouths rock! And the looks you got are much, much better than looks I've gotten at Frogies before. You're lucky.

Also, what's "squee"?

Re: Rails

Date: 2004-03-16 11:53 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] gemfyre.livejournal.com
Hehe, *squee* is just a general expression of excitement and bounciness.

Re: Rails

Date: 2004-03-17 10:50 pm (UTC)

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