I am sure that I used to see White-fronted Chats at Banyule Flats c 1970
when I first went there.
I saw Stubble Quail a few times at Chelsworth Park then, before the
grass was kept mown. (We had Rufous Song-lark there once or twice too).
Anthea Fleming
On 26/02/2014 7:17 AM, Peter Shute wrote:
On 25 Feb 2014, at 9:18 pm, "Philip Veerman" <> wrote:
Once I saw a tiny Chat feeding a young Cuckoo about four times its size. Not
likely to be a Chat at least by our use of the name. That could be any
likely foster species.
Maybe a White-fronted Chat? They're common in other parts of Melbourne,
although I see no records of them close to there.
You mention "but I have no sightings of Pallid Cuckoos" but the quote
appears to just say "Cuckoo". So could be another one.
Pallid Cuckoo is mentioned in the second sentence too, although the later
reference could be any of several others. There are records for Pallid Cuckoo
at Banyule Flats just up the river.
Peter Shute
-----Original Message-----
From: Birding-Aus On Behalf Of
Bill Stent
Sent: Tuesday, 25 February 2014 6:46 PM
To:
Subject: [Birding-Aus] Slightly late bird report - Kew East, Victoria
Hi all, I was going through some old papers the other day when I found this.
It was written by my grandfather in 1985 about the birds of the local place
(I now live in his old house). He's referring to the period between the
wars, I'd guess, although he didn't make that plain, it's just a memoir. He
lived in the area between 1918 and 1992.
My question is what are these birds? I didn't start birding until after he
died, so I never talked with him about them, apart from when I was a very
young kid "helped" him milk his cows on what is now Hays Paddock. I think I
know most of them, such as the Laughing Jackass, rather obvious really, but
what is a Tomtit? We do occasionally see Black Shouldered Kites or Collared
Sparrowhawks, but I have no sightings of Pallid Cuckoos.
Bill (junior - my grandfather's name was also Bill)
The Glass Creek area and Hays' farm used to be a veritable Eden of birdlife.
In the Springtime at sunrise I have counted up to 30 species of birds. The
Pallid Cuckoo or Brainfever Bird, so called for its plaintiff insistent
call, and the Laughing Jackass were prominent, as was the Butcher Bird with
its melodious rich notes. The Mudlarks had their mud nest in the gum tree
near the cow shed, the Willy Wagtails nested over the creek in the willow
trees, the Teal and Black Ducks were on the edge of the creek in the furze
bushes. The Reed Warblers, Tomtits, Goldfinches and Silvereyes were in the
shrubbery, not forgetting the restless little Blue Wrens with their dun
coloured harems. The Rosellas nested in the big gum tree near Newberry St
where also the Sparrow Hawk and the Blackshouldered Kite made their base.
The Magpies nestled in the gum trees further down. The Diamond Sparrows had
little burrows in the creek bank for their nest. Once I saw a tiny Chat
feeding a young Cuckoo about four times its size.
The Skylarks during the day were a delight to the children. They would fly
singing and spiralling upwards and then suddenly, closing their wings, drop
silently like a stone to earth. There were also Plovers, Blue Cranes, Quail.
Wattle Birds, Robin Red Breasts, Crows and the occasional flock of Ibis and
of course the Blackbird and Thrush songsters. Colonies of little Fire Tails
and Bell Birds
still exist around the billabong at Burke Rd Bridge.
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