canberrabirds

Blue-winged Parrot

To: Chris <>
Subject: Blue-winged Parrot
From: John Harris <>
Date: Fri, 11 Oct 2013 02:41:40 +0000
Thanks Chris. 
Yes a possibility I guess. But the green was dull even in the sun when i first saw it. Turkeys as we used to call Turquoise Parrots when I was a kid (a very long time ago) are very bright in the sun.
I will keep an eye out for it but unless I see it again there will be no additional information. I judge it to be a Blue-winged Parrot and I am not sue that replacing that ID with another equally unusual bird proves anything much! 
Put it this way, I saw an unusual but not impossible parrot and from what I saw and from past experience, I judged it to be a Blue-winged parrot.  I don't mind if the rarities panel accepts it or not! It was SOMETHING unusual and it made my morning.
Thanks for being interested
John 

John Harris
Rev Dr John Harris,
36 Kangaroo Close,
Nicholls, ACT 2913
AUSTRALIA
P: 61-(0)2-62418472
E:






On 11/10/2013, at 12:58 PM, Chris <>
 wrote:

Hi John, what about female Turquoise Parrot as an alternative? Did you see the frontal band on the forehead or could it have had a blue face?

Cheers,
Chris

Sent from my iPhone

On 11/10/2013, at 8:50 AM, Julian Teh <> wrote:

Just to note, due to it's proximity to Nicholls, this could be an escaped elegant parrot from the walk-in aviary in gold creek. Unlikely, seeing as the elegants are kept within an aviary of their own inside the main walkthrough, but still possible.

Cheers,
Julian Teh


On 11 Oct 2013, at 11:24 am, John Harris <> wrote:

Today I saw a Blue-winged Parrot behind my house at Nicholls which backs onto Ginnninderra Creek. I have submitted an unusual bird report.
It was a small dull olive green parrot with bright blue wings which shone in the sun. It was feeding on the grass but when disturbed flew up into a grove of wattles and grevilleas. I watched it hiding there with binoculars for about 5 minutes. In the shade it looked more like a blackish bird with blue wings. It made high pitched squeaks. After 5 minutes I tried to get closer and spooked it and it  it flew west to the woodland trees on Percival Hill. It flew straight and fast, not undulating like Eastern Rosella etc.  Plenty of Easterns around as well as Red-rumps and juvenile Crimsons which were the only unlikely candidates for wrong identification. I tried to follow but lost it. 
I raised one as a kid. It had fallen from a nest before it could fly. I had it for some years.
John
John Harris
Rev Dr John Harris,
36 Kangaroo Close,
Nicholls, ACT 2913
AUSTRALIA
P: 61-(0)2-62418472
E:







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