Thanks for that Danny. First time, I have been aware of a bird being mentioned and posted on CMN. I would like to see more of it although I understand for commercial reasons that there are others who do not like to post their photographs.
On Fri, 22 Mar 2019 at 06:34, Danny McCreadie <> wrote:
Thank you to all who responded. I have placed an entry in Canberra Nature Map as a result.
https://canberra.naturemapr.org/Community/Sightings/Details/4204277#Comments
Danny
From: shorty <>
Sent: Thursday, March 21, 2019 10:49 PM
To: Philip Veerman <>
Cc: Danny McCreadie <>; COG Chat <m("canberrabirds.org.au","canberrabirds");" target="_blank">>
Subject: Re: [canberrabirds] Re: [eBird Alert] Australian Capital Territory Rare Bird Alert <daily>
So far this Year on eBird there have been 15 sightings at 11 locations in the A.C.T..
Maybe due to the poor conditions inland.
On Thu, Mar 21, 2019 at 10:36 PM Philip Veerman <> wrote:
That is a semantic issue as to what you perceive the words to mean. They are a somewhat regular summer visitor. We get one or two records most summers
maybe not all but I haven’t look up that, some years more than others. That makes them somewhat rare. Would not qualify as “really rare”, although that was not claimed. Maybe your question is to be best taken as: “really, are they rare?” and that could be
yes.
And I have deleted the bit about
Spotted Pardalote
as that was accepted as a mistake.
Philip
From: Danny McCreadie [
Sent: Thursday, 21 March, 2019 10:10 PM
To:
Subject: RE: [canberrabirds] Re: [eBird Alert] Australian Capital Territory Rare Bird Alert <daily>
Um, I am new to Canberra, but are Black Kites really rare here?
Danny
On 21/03/2019 7:29 am, calyptorhynchus wrote:
On Wed, 20 Mar 2019 at 21:27, <> wrote:
*** Species Summary:
- Pied Cormorant (1 report)
- Black Kite (1 report)
- Spotted Pardalote (Spotted) (1 report)
---------------------------------------------
Thank you for subscribing to the <daily> Australian Capital Territory Rare Bird Alert.The report below shows observations of rare birds in Australian Capital Territory. View or unsubscribe to this alert at
https://ebird.org/alert/summary?sid=SN38762
NOTE: all sightings are UNCONFIRMED unless indicated
Pied Cormorant (Phalacrocorax varius) (1)
- Reported Mar 20, 2019 13:20 by Will Morris
- Lake Burley Griffin--East Basin, Australian Capital Territory
- Map:
http://maps.google.com/?ie=UTF8&t=p&z=13&q=-35.30655,149.1455&ll=-35.30655,149.1455
- Checklist:
https://ebird.org/view/checklist/S54032089
- Comments: "Large black and white cormorant with blue and yellow on face. In water."
Black Kite (Milvus migrans) (2)
- Reported Mar 19, 2019 11:33 by Rainer Rehwinkel
- Nevertire Street parkland, Australian Capital Territory
- Map:
http://maps.google.com/?ie=UTF8&t=p&z=13&q=-35.2339472,149.0909153&ll=-35.2339472,149.0909153
- Checklist:
https://ebird.org/view/checklist/S54033341
- Comments: "Two birds were observed from my balcony. They were flying high over the suburb of Bruce in a south-easterly direction. They appeared to be doing some sort of courtship flight, with the two birds locking talons for a short time (one or two seconds),
with one bird flying upside-down. Then they flew off with shallow wingbeats, seemingly synchronised. They were definitely Black Kites: they were dark all over, had forked tails and flew on flatly held wings."
***********
You received this message because you are subscribed to eBird's Australian Capital Territory Rare Bird Alert
Manage your eBird alert subscriptions:
https://ebird.org/alerts
--
John Leonard
Canberra
Australia
www.jleonard.net
‘There is kinship between people and all animals. Such is the Law.’ Kimberley lawmen (from Yorro Yorro)
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