birding-aus

Bowerbird at Quirindi, south of Tamworth

To: "Tim Dolby" <>, "" <>, "Mick Roderick" <>, "" <>
Subject: Bowerbird at Quirindi, south of Tamworth
From:
Date: Sun, 8 May 2011 06:45:09 +0000
Thanks for your support on this. I believe non-definite reports are useful in 
alerting folk to possibilities.

As for un-tickable sightings, I often find that when I eventually get a good 
view of a particular species, I find I can upgrade or delete some 
probable/possible sightings but there is nothing quite like seeing and knowing 
at the same moment - the twitcher's addiction!

Cheers

Mark Stanley
Sent via BlackBerry® from Telstra

-----Original Message-----
From: Tim Dolby <>
Date: Sun, 8 May 2011 03:55:36 
To: <>; Mick 
Roderick<>; Mark Stanley<>; 
<>
Subject: RE: Bowerbird at Quirindi, south of Tamworth

I agree with both Mick and Jeff. This report is really worth following up 
(interested to hear if Alan Morris comes up with anything). As Jeff states, if 
you thought it looked like a Western Bowerbird then it is unlikely that you 
were looking at a female Satin Bowerbird. The recent rains have certainly 
impacted on bird movements, with some species turning up in unusual places.

In terms of your personal records, it may be worth trusting your judgement - 
although for your life list it may have to go down as a 'non tickable 
sighting'. Over the years I have had many of them.

Cheers,

Tim Dolby

________________________________________
From: Mick Roderick 
Sent: Friday, May 06, 2011 1:24 PM
To: Tim Dolby; Mark Stanley; 
Subject: Bowerbird at Quirindi, south of Tamworth

Hi Mark and Tim et al,

Great timing, as I've just returned from seeing a Spotted Bowerbird at North 
Rothbury, which is roughly 170km further along the New England Highway towards 
the coast (as Tim has just pointed out). To give something of a background, a 
local observer (Andrew Zoneff) made a small number of observations of Spotted 
Bowerbirds in the vicinity of North Rothbury / Pokolbin last year, including 
one observation of 3 birds together, associating with Satins. They weren't 
reported at the time but after he photographed one in his backyard (North 
Rothbury) a few weeks ago and sent me the image, a few keen Hunter birders have 
been out and have found the bird(s), Allan Richardson being the first (and it's 
a great photo on Birdline that he took too).

I was looking at one about 2 hours ago!

I have also seen one at Munghorn Gap and Dave Geering saw one at Merriwa in 
2003, both which are east of the GDR.

I have never seen any species of Bowerbird at Quirindi but I wouldn't write 
Spotted Bowerbird off just yet, especially given that there seems to be a small 
population around North Rothbury (and perhaps elsewhere in the Hunter?). There 
are some nice 'western' birds not far from Quirindi, like Inland Thornbill, 
White-winged Fairy-wren, Blue Bonnet, Ringnecks, Cockatiel etc. I have seen 
Apostlebirds on the road between Quirindi and Willow Tree.

Could be worthy of further investigation.

Mick

p.s. - I will forward this to Alan Morris for his comment.
________________________________
From: Tim Dolby <>
To: Mark Stanley <>; "" 
<>
Sent: Fri, 6 May, 2011 12:53:28 PM
Subject: Bowerbird at Quirindi, south of Tamworth

Hi Mark,

Just quickly here's what I can ascertain.

In terms of Spotted Bowerbird, I can find a record at Premer, 80 km west of 
Quirindi, and at Split Rock Reservoir, 100 km northwest of Quirindi. The 
closest established populations is at Leard State Forest and Mt Kaputar 
National Park, 120 km northwest of Quirindi. However interestingly just a 
couple of weeks ago a Spotted Bowerbird was seen in the urban streets of 
Rothbury by Allan Richardson (4/10/2011) and then again by Steve Roderick 
(4/30/2011). See a NSW Birdline report at 
http://www.eremaea.com/BirdlineRecentSightings.aspx?Birdline=2 and scroll down 
to #17296.A remarkable record, this 170 km southeast of Quirindi, and just 50 
km from Newcastle.

In terms of Satin Bowerbird, they have been recorded in Quirindi once before, 
as well as nearby at Wallabadah, 15 km east of Quirindi, and they are resident 
at Murrurundi, 35 km to the southeast.

Going by this, my guess is that your bird was a female Satin Bowerbird.

Cheers,

Tim Dolby

________________________________________
From: 
<>
 
<>]
 on behalf of Mark Stanley 
<>]
Sent: Thursday, May 05, 2011 9:33 PM
To: <>
Subject: Bowerbird at Quirindi, south of Tamworth

While driving into Quirindi from the New England Highway, I saw what I saw a
bowerbird land beside, then fly into an orange-berried bush in a garden.
Bins were'nt handy and anyway was driving to a meeting with no time to stop.
At a glance it looked a bit like a pale Western Bowerbird with which I'm
familiar so I assumed it was a Spotted Bowerbird. But Birdata shows Quirindi
a bit outside its range but just inside the Satin Bowerbird range so am now
assuming it was probably a female of the latter species. Would anyone
familiar with birds in the area care to comment?

--
Mark Stanley
===============================

To unsubscribe from this mailing list,
send the message:
unsubscribe
(in the body of the message, with no Subject line)
to: <>

http://birding-aus.org<http://birding-aus.org/>
===============================
This email, including any attachment, is intended solely for the use of the 
intended recipient. It is confidential and may contain personal information or 
be subject to legal professional privilege. If you are not the intended 
recipient any use, disclosure, reproduction or storage of it is unauthorised. 
If you have received this email in error, please advise the sender via return 
email and delete it from your system immediately. Victoria University does not 
warrant that this email is free from viruses or defects and accepts no 
liability for any damage caused by such viruses or defects.
===============================

To unsubscribe from this mailing list,
send the message:
unsubscribe
(in the body of the message, with no Subject line)
to: <>

http://birding-aus.org<http://birding-aus.org/>
===============================
This email, including any attachment, is intended solely for the use of the 
intended recipient. It is confidential and may contain personal information or 
be subject to legal professional privilege. If you are not the intended 
recipient any use, disclosure, reproduction or storage of it is unauthorised. 
If you have received this email in error, please advise the sender via return 
email and delete it from your system immediately. Victoria University does not 
warrant that this email is free from viruses or defects and accepts no 
liability for any damage caused by such viruses or defects.
===============================

To unsubscribe from this mailing list,
send the message:
unsubscribe
(in the body of the message, with no Subject line)
to: 

http://birding-aus.org
===============================

<Prev in Thread] Current Thread [Next in Thread>
Admin

The University of NSW School of Computer and Engineering takes no responsibility for the contents of this archive. It is purely a compilation of material sent by many people to the birding-aus mailing list. It has not been checked for accuracy nor its content verified in any way. If you wish to get material removed from the archive or have other queries about the archive e-mail Andrew Taylor at this address: andrewt@cse.unsw.EDU.AU