Wednesday, 2 December 2020
201202_Peach Flat_Christmas Social
Wednesday, 4 November 2020
201104_Seaspray and environs
John, Marg, Michele and Jack had a great day, birding a farm near Seaspray, the beach at Seaspray and Lake Reeve at the Honeysuckles. Although overcast and a bit humid, the day remained dry. Our farm total was 32 including the absolute undisputed standout of 12 Banded Lapwings including a couple of juveniles. These birds have been at this site for at least 6-8 weeks. Magic to see. The farm owner has been doing revegetation work for quite a few years now and the result is plain to see with most birds being seen in reveg areas or areas left to nature. Pigface and samphire abounded. We were disappointed to not spot an OBP!
We sojourned to Seaspray CBD (Merriman's Creek) for lunch then a look at the beach (Crested and Caspian Tern and Pacific Gulls) and then a look at Lake Reeve at the Honeysuckles where the standout were a pair of White-bellied Sea-eagles. All in all 46 species for the day. This did not include Scarlet Honeyeater which could be heard in the roadside vegetation from south of Longford.
The Christmas Outing will be at Peach Flat. Marg Gwyther will co-ordinate the catering. Please contact her if coming. An email will be sent in a couple of weeks.
Images from John Gwyther and Jack Winterbottom. The grainy ones are Jack's! The WBSE were at a distance of 500 metres +!
Black Swan
Australian Shelduck
Australian Wood Duck
Grey Teal
Chestnut Teal
Spotted Dove
Common Bronzewing
Crested Pigeon
Pied Stilt
Banded Lapwing
Masked Lapwing
Red-capped Plover
Silver Gull
Pacific Gull
Crested Tern
Caspian Tern
Great Cormorant
Australian Pelican
White-faced Heron
Straw-necked Ibis
Black-shouldered Kite
Swamp Harrier
Whistling Kite
White-bellied Sea-eagle
Galah
Superb Fairywren
Little Wattlebird
Red Wattlebird
White-fronted Chat
White-browed Scrubwren
Brown Thornbill
Yellow-rumped Thornbill
Grey Butcherbird
Australian Magpie (White-backed)
Willie Wagtail
Grey Fantail
Magpie-lark
Little Raven
Eurasian Skylark
Golden-headed Cisticola
Welcome Swallow
Common Starling
Common Myna
Australasian Pipit
Scarlet Honeyeater (image John Gwyther) |
Australasian Pipit (Rob Clay Syndrome) |
Banded Lapwing, adult |
Banded Lapwing, juvenile |
Red-capped Plover, male |
Superb Fairywren, male |
White-bellied Sea-eagles and Black Swans |
Sunday, 11 October 2020
201007_Sale and the Common
Our scout in Seaspray reported that the weather was "mizzling" whereby it was mist and drizzle and you needed wipers on your specs to make sense of anything. The outing venue was changed "on the run" to Lake Guyatt and, after that, Sale Common. We walked as far as we could heading south to the first flooded part beyond the Brick Watering Trough. Several sensible folk had opted to wait a week or so to do the Seaspray outing so we had a perfect 9 folks including Gabby (from USA) with Rod and Michele. We will be doing the Seaspray outing on the first Wednesday in November whilst the "opt-for-a-different-date"rs will do their visit shortly. This way we can be happy we are obeying the Covid social distancing and gathering thing.
Lake Guyatt came up the usual trumps with plenty of good species but the absolute highlight was the small gathering of Scarlet Honeyeaters in flowering eucs near and at the Rifle Butts. We had been a bit confused by the call for a while but then it suddenly clicked. Scarlet HEs are having a bit of an irruption across Gippsland atm. We first thought they were Mistletoebirds.
The birdcall for the day came up with 64 species, an excellent total for quite a social walk!
The first four images are John's and the others are Jack's.
New Holland Honeyeater |
Superb Fairywren |
Chestnut Teal |
Royal Spoonbill |
Black Swans |
Dusky Moorhen |
Hardhead |
Red Wattlebird |
Rufous Whistler, male |
Scarlet Honeyeater |
Australasian Darter
Australasian Swamphen
Australian King-Parrot
Australian Magpie
Australian Pelican
Australian Reed Warbler
Australian White Ibis
Australian Wood Duck
Black Swan
Black-faced Cuckooshrike
Brown Goshawk
Brown Thornbill
Cattle Egret
Chestnut Teal
Common Blackbird
Common Starling
Crimson Rosella
Dusky Moorhen
Eastern Spinebill
Eurasian Coot
European Goldfinch
Fan-tailed Cuckoo
Galah
Golden Whistler
Grey Butcherbird
Grey Fantail
Grey Shrikethrush
Grey Teal
Hardhead
House Sparrow
Latham's Snipe
Laughing Kookaburra
Little Black Cormorant
Little Pied Cormorant
Little Raven
Little Wattlebird
Magpie-lark
Masked Lapwing
Mistletoebird
New Holland Honeyeater
Olive-backed Oriole
Pacific Black Duck
Pied Currawong
Rainbow Lorikeet
Red Wattlebird
Royal Spoonbill
Rufous Whistler
Sacred Kingfisher
Scarlet Honeyeater
Shining Bronze-Cuckoo
Silvereye
Spotted Dove
Spotted Pardalote
Striated Pardalote
Sulphur-crested Cockatoo
Superb Fairywren
Swamp Harrier
Welcome Swallow
Whistling Kite
White-browed Scrubwren
White-faced Heron
White-necked Heron
Yellow-billed Spoonbill
Yellow-faced Honeyeater
Sunday, 9 August 2020
200805_Stratford
It must have been the urge to get one last birding outing in before stage 3 COVID restrictions came into force the next day. That is the only explanation as to why 11 of us braved the forecast 8 degrees, showers, wind and chance of a thunderstorm to gather in Stratford. Despite the very fresh breeze, it was sunny and not too cold. Maybe we all knew the forecast was wrong.
After splitting up into two groups to meet COVID rules, we wandered from Apex Park through the railway bridge construction site and along the river bank to the lookout and back (see attached map). Being at tree-top height for the dense foliage down the slope, we got some great views of a number of species. Twenty four species is a good count with an elusive Eastern Whipbird in there too. A dozen or so Silvereyes cavorted for a few minutes in close sight in a wattle tree. Most of them seemed to be Tasmanian lateralis lateralis. Most photogenic birds were Grey Shrikethrush and Grey Fantail.
Apex Park, Stratford (-37.97135, 147.07913)
2.40 km
113 Minutes
3 Pacific Black Duck
1 Great Cormorant
2 Galah
192 Little Corella
1 Crimson Rosella
1 Rainbow Lorikeet
1 Superb Fairywren
2 Eastern Spinebill
2 Yellow-faced Honeyeater
3 Red Wattlebird
2 New Holland Honeyeater
1 Spotted Pardalote
1 Striated Pardalote
2 White-browed Scrubwren
2 Yellow Thornbill
1 Eastern Whipbird
2 Grey Shrikethrush
51 Australian Magpie (White-backed)
1 Willie Wagtail
4 Grey Fantail
3 Little Raven
2 House Sparrow
Pied Cormorant
Welcome Swallow
Silvereye
Little Wattlebird
Common Blackbird
Common Myna
Common Starling
Crested Pigeon
Number of Taxa: 30
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After a socially-distanced morning tea, we went up to the Knob Reserve for a wander through the bush to the farm/bush interface to the south of the oval, then up to the lookout. Not a massive number of birds but our socially-distanced lunch at the Oval was visited by a magnificent White-bellied Sea-eagle who soared overhead for a couple of turns.
Everyone was glad they came out.
NEXT OUTING: none for a while until we see COVID restrictions eased. Stay tuned (and stay safe and sane).
BLEG_Knob Reserve
1.07 km
65 Minutes
2 Pacific Black Duck
1 Straw-necked Ibis
1 White-bellied Sea-Eagle
2 Laughing Kookaburra
4 Galah
2 Sulphur-crested Cockatoo
1 Crimson Rosella
2 Rainbow Lorikeet
1 Striated Pardalote
1 Black-faced Cuckooshrike
2 Australian Magpie (White-backed)
1 Grey Fantail
2 Magpie-lark
2 Little Raven
Litle Corella
Whistling Kite
Number of Taxa: 16