Hello all,
Travelling back to Deniliquin from Griffith on
Friday 13th, what is superstitiously meant to be a bad day turned out to be one
of good fortune.
After leaving the Kidman Way, turning right along
the McLennans Bore Road I stopped shortly after crossing over the Cadell Road.
Initially what was meant to be a short stop (nature called) tured into a long
one when a group of Noisy Miners one by one called in alert.
Soon the disruptor came into view, a light grey
bird with black wingtips, tail slightly fanned. Its appearance I likened to a
Grey Falcon I had seen almost 12 months ago at Goolgowi. As it moved on I
followed it though the Boree maintaining watch of the bird. In its gliding
the bird would occasionally bank, showing the grey body of a Grey Falcon.
Finally after following the bird for twenty minutes
or more it came down to perch at the top of a dead Boree. I was amazed that the Noisy Miners in the area would not come and harrass
the bird but preferred to keep an eye from a distance. Perched, I
observed the bird a while longer until it took off again as happily as it
had come down.
This observation adds to the interesting sightings
which are being made around the southern Riverina at the present as a result of
the dryness. Other intersting birds observed in the area of recent times
includes Swift Parrots, Musk, Purple-crowned and Little Lorikeets, Budgies,
Fuscous and White-fronted Honeyeaters and a pair (now single individual)
Red-tailed Black-Cockatoo.
What a place to be!
Cheers
David Parker
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