Lach and I went out to Parkwood first thing this morning, ostensibly to check on the Crimson Chat, but the lure of the opening rolling grassland across the border was too great, and we drove out to Ginninderry Falls turnaround and back,
birding along the way. The land was dry and the grass was short, but the morning was beautiful and there were still grassland birds around – a few pipits, more skylarks and bushlarks, and a single songlark.
The single songlark was a Brown Songlark, by size probably a female rather than an immature male. It was like a pipit but taller and lankier, and speckled rather than striated, with no white in its tail. It was moving
around, perching and feeding about 500 m into NSW, where the road dips. Thanks to Lach for first spotting this bird – he has photos that he will post.
Equally interesting were the Horsfield’s Bushlarks, at least half a dozen on the ground, in display flights and chasing each other. For the first time we heard the range of mimicry that this species can include in
its song. Amongst the reasonably quiet lark-like twitterings were snatches of Red-rumped Parrot and Magpie-lark, Black-faced Cuckoo-shrike and Starling, and – a first for me for any mimic – the take-off flight of a Crested Pigeon! Lach heard additional species
in the mix.
Full list at
https://ebird.org/australia/checklist/S62100084.
Steve