canberrabirds

A tale of two koels

To: Martin Butterfield <>
Subject: A tale of two koels
From: John Harris <>
Date: Mon, 9 Dec 2013 05:58:25 +0000
Interesting statistic!
John Harris
Rev Dr John Harris,
36 Kangaroo Close,
Nicholls, ACT 2913
AUSTRALIA
P: 61-(0)2-62418472
E:






On 9 Dec 2013, at 4:27 pm, Martin Butterfield <> wrote:

It is important to remember that John's arrival 13 years pretty much coincided with the Koel's move from exciting rarity to noisy nuisance.  I'm not suggesting he had anything particular in his suitcase!
<koel.JPG>



On 9 December 2013 16:04, Geoffrey Dabb <> wrote:

They are heard daily at many locations, John.  However, the rule is that you are allowed one chatline report for a location where not previously heard.  That tends to give the wrong impression that they are not fairly common at this time of year throughout the Canberra suburbs as a whole.

 

From: John Harris [
Sent: Monday, 9 December 2013 2:19 PM
To: chatline canberrabirds
Subject: [canberrabirds] A tale of two koels

 

 

 

A Tale of two Koels

Always plenty of koels around here. Interesting interplay of two koels here in Nicholls yesterday evening. Female Koel was calling from the lower branches of a eucalyptus tree outside my back fence, with it’s typical three or four loud shrieks ( which carry quite a distance). The much more musical, more melodious male Koel answered antiphonally from about 200 metres away across the creek on Percival Hill.  It was nearly dusk but not quite and standing beneath the tree I watched the pretty female calling at close range for 5 minutes. 

The duet went on for about half an hour and my wife and I enjoyed the little performance with a glass of wine on the back verandah. They stopped on dark.

Don’t often get to hear this interaction, especially as prolonged as it was this time.

Cheers

John

PS I was bemused by all the sudden excitement about koels on the chatline a few weeks ago. I have seen and heard Koels here every year for the past 13 years I have lived here and I thought them interesting but not remarkable. But when I looked them up in the COG Annual Bird Report, I then realised that they were considered uncommon and that people were therefore keen to hear and report them.

 




--
Martin Butterfield

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