birding-aus

Trip to Norfolk Island

To: "birding-aus" <>
Subject: Trip to Norfolk Island
From: "Jan England " <>
Date: Mon, 4 Feb 2008 20:43:31 +1000
Hi Everyone,

I just arrived home last night from a 1 week trip to Norfolk Island.  The 
weather was not the best with high winds for most of the week due to the 
cyclone off New Caledonia but there was little rain so we were able to walk 
each day.  I met up with Margaret & Eric Wheeler at Brisbane airport so it was 
nice to have some other people to bird with during the week.  We went out with 
the local bird-guide Margaret Christian on two mornings walking the tracks 
around Mt. Pitt.  The Slender-billed White-eye was easy to find but according 
to Margaret there have been no sightings of the White-breasted White-eye since 
2004.  We also saw the Red-fronted Parakeet on a few occasions around the Mt. 
Pitt area.

There were no sightings of the Pacific(Scarlet) Robin (now a separate species 
in the latest Christides & Boles checklist) in this area but we did see a 
beautiful male at the boardwalk near Bird Rock.  The road to Captain Cook 
Memorial was closed due to repairs on the track so the only access was via the 
Red Road track.  Grey Ternlet, Great Frigatebird, Red-tailed Tropicbird, Sooty 
Tern and Masked Booby were all seen around Bird Rock.

It was fairly quiet along the foreshore around Emily & Slaughter Bays and the 
Kingston Pier probably due to the high winds although we did see plenty of 
Ruddy Turnstones, a Wandering Tattler and a Double-banded Plover.  Of course 
our trip to Phillip Island was cancelled and the Norfolk Trader which arrived 
last Tuesday was still waiting to be unloaded on Sunday as the lighters could 
not operate in the choppy conditions.
Birds seen on the Kingston Common were Pacific Golden Plover, Whimbrel, 
Bar-tailed Godwit, Purple Swamphen, Latham Snipe and of course plenty of 
Mallard/Black Duck hybrids.

It was sad to see so many exotic species of birds and weeds such as Common 
Starlings and Feral Pigeons with the island largely covered in Hawaiian Holly 
(I think we call this Broad-leafed Pepper in Qld), Lantana and Cherry Guava 
which grows right through the National Park although they are trying to control 
it.

There are plenty of restaurants and tourist activities to chose from making it 
a great holiday choice for the non-birder as well.  The temperature was a very 
pleasant 17-25 degress for most of the week.

Below is a list of the 42 species seen on the island.

Feral Chicken                                                            Grey 
Ternlet
California Quail                                                           
White Tern
Feral Goose                                                               Rock 
Dove
Mallard                                                                      
Emerald Dove
Pacific Black Duck                                                     Crimson 
Rosella
Black-winged Petrel                                                    
Red-fronted Parakeet
Wedge-tailed Shearwater                                             Sacred 
Kingfisher
Red-tailed Tropicbird                                                    
Norfolk Island Gerygone
Masked Booby                                                            Pacific 
Robin
Great Frigatebird                                                         
Golden Whistler
White-faced Heron                                                       Grey 
Fantail
Nankeen Kestrel                                                          
White-breastedWoodswallow
Purple Swamphen                                                        House 
Sparrow
Latham's Snipe                                                            
Welcome Swallow
Bar-tailed Godwit                                                         
Silvereye
Whimbrel                                                                    
Slender-billed White-eye
Eastern Curlew                                                            
Common Blackbird
Wandering Tattler                                                         
Island Thrush
Ruddy Turnstone                                                          Common 
Starling
Pacific Golden Plover
Double-banded Plover
Sooty Tern
Black Noddy

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