canberrabirds
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To: | "'jude hopwood'" <>, "'COG'" <> |
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Subject: | Rapturous non-raptor Help? |
From: | "Philip Veerman" <> |
Date: | Wed, 13 Feb 2013 11:22:04 +1100 |
Hi
Jude,
Well
of course it is hard for someone who wasn't there to know on what basis you feel
the birds were singing on the
ground. I have not observed this, maybe others know of this. However what
you actually saw (or didn't) is I scanned for a full 20 minutes but could not see any
bird of any sort. It is entirely normal for these birds to be singing
(larking) in flight so high in the sky that they are not visible, especially
against a clear sky. By that I mean I have often searched for ages in the sky
for one and only eventually seen it or seen it come down from near where the
sound was coming from, after it stopped singing. So why not
that?
Philip
-----Original Message-----
From: jude hopwood [ Sent: Wednesday, 13 February 2013 7:15 AM To: COG Subject: [canberrabirds] Rapturous non-raptor Help? Dear All,
I apologise for the broad nature of this sort-of-non-posting, but feel the
experience was worth sharing now I have an ID. Is there anyone who could advise
if this non-flight flocking behaviour is normal for this bird at that time of
year?
At some point in early November, (no date) I stopped at The Pelican, a farm
home stay property beside Wakefield Park Raceway on Braidwood Road South of
Goulburn, for a closer look at a large-ish raptor perched in a dead tree. I'd
parked, picked up the binoculars and found a safe spot to stand and view, by
which time the raptor had moved on. However, I was utterly deafened by
rapturous song coming from all over the lambing field (no stock) full of very
long grass in front of the stockyards. I scanned for a full 20 minutes but could
not see any bird of any sort, although there were clearly very many of them and
the songs did not stop, slow down nor cease at all. On reading this month's
report by Jack Holland on the Brown Songlark, Horsfield’s Bushlark and the
Eurasian Skylark I can say it was not the Brown Songlark, which we used to call
the electric bird where we lived near Milthorpe, central NSW, nor the Bushlark,
but definitely the Eurasian Skylark, singing on the ground. Perhaps it was just
the season.
Jude
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