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Trip Report - Mystery Bay (NSW South Coast) - 25-28 April [SEC=PERSONAL]

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Subject: Trip Report - Mystery Bay (NSW South Coast) - 25-28 April [SEC=PERSONAL]
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Date: Mon, 30 Apr 2007 09:20:37 +1000



We spent 3 nights at Mystery Bay Cottages (near Narooma on the NSW south
coast). It was honeyeater heaven. The cottages are surrounded by a huge
amount of flowering shrubs (Banksia, Grevillea, Bottlebrush, etc) plus the
Spotted Gums were in blossom. This attracted enormous amounts of
honeyeaters and lorikeets as well as other creatures such as:

Yellow-faced Honeyeater (50++)
White-naped Honeyeater (10-20)
New Holland Honeyeater (30+)
Eastern Spinebill (20+)
Red Wattlebird (1000+ migrating in large flocks at 50 every 5 mins)
Little Wattlebird (20+)
Fuscous Honeyeater (4+)
Crescent Honeyeater (1 male)
Scarlet Honeyeater (1 immature male)
Silvereye (40+)
Rainbow Lorikeet (100-200)
Musk Lorikeet (50+)
Grey-headed Fruit Bat (20+)
Common Brushtail Possum (2+)
Common Ringtail Possum (4+)

Other highlights on the property were Glossy Black-Cockatoo (2), Eastern
Shrike-tit (female), Variegated Fairy-wren, Dusky Woodswallow (3), Brown
Gerygone, Cattle Egret (2) and Whistling Kite. Non-avian highlights
included a Long-nosed Bandicoot foraging around the cottage, an Agile
Antechinus by the Games Cottage and many Peron's Tree Frogs easily found
moving around after rain at night.

Further afield we found 5 White-headed Pigeons at Beauty Point (near
Bermagui), 6 Musk Ducks (1m,5f) on Nargal Lake and a huge array of
waterbirds at Wallaga Lake including 50 Royal Spoonbills. At Bermagui
Harbour were 2 Red-capped Plovers, 5 Double-banded Plovers and a late
Olive-backed Oriole. Small groups of Bar-tailed Godwits still at Bermagui,
Narooma and Wallaga Lake.  Also 9 Sooty Oystercatchers at Cape Dromedary.

Along Loaders Beach we found a massive dead bull male fur seal strangely
metres from a washed up TV. It seemed to me a big storm had passed through
recently, which may also account for Wallaga Lake now being joined to the
sea.

And Narooma Harbour and Mill Bay Boardwalk never fails to deliver on marine
life with large numbers of juvenile Green Moray Eels, some 1.5 metres long,
easily viewed from the shore two metres away. They are best seen as high
tide comes in. Also the usual massive Smooth Stingrays and an Eagle Ray
within touching distance. Fishes included a beautiful juvenile Threadfin
Butterflyfish, Mado, One-spot Chromis and Cardinalfish.

Cheers

Marnix Zwankhuizen
Senior Analyst/Programmer
Project GENESIS
Australian Electoral Commission

Ph:   02 6271 4465
Fax: 02 6271 4644
Email: 




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