birding-aus
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To: | <>, <> |
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Subject: | Summer in central west NSW |
From: | "Robert Gosford" <> |
Date: | Mon, 17 Jan 2005 20:09:56 +1100 |
I can
echo some of David's observations from the south coast of NSW at Jervis Bay
-
- two
juvenile Collared Sparrowhawks appear to have been abandoned post-fledge by
their parents in the heavily-wooded gully next to our house that runs down to
the beach - they have been in CSh boot camp for the past fdew weeks and the
changes in their flight, pursuit and kill eficiencies are manifest and a joy to
watch - though like Dave's Peregrines their mewling calls are incessant and
inacapable of being ignored. We have seen one kill and several meals -
usually with the successful bird silent but busy on a dead horizontal
branch or on the ground and the unsuccessful sibling sitting nearby keening
excitedly. 10 days ago they were busy chasing Eastern Spine-bills and Restless
Flycatchers or tailchasing each other through the dense hakea, banksia and
eucalypt scrub behind the house - occasionaly erupting into the clear air over
our heads - now they are more confident flyers, chasers and killers - they range
through the 15 ha. or so of the gully area at all heights - I am surprised how
much time they spend near to and on the ground and at how easily and quickly
they weave their way - especially in pursuit mode - through all layers of the
forest ...
- I
have also seen increasingly large MFFs around - the usual Variegated Wren,
Red-browed finch, Brown thornbill and White-Browed scrub wren mixes are back
moving through the yard and gully on a regular basis - they also do a good job
keeping the bugs off the veges.
The
fruit on the pittosporum outside the window is slowly turning yellow and I'm
expecting to see thornbills and silvereyes picking out the seeds and flesh
soon(ish).
On
late nesting - last weekend we found a Little Wattlebird's nest with two eggs in
it - perhaps a month or so late - maybe a re-nesting - what was surprising was
that the nest was no more than a meter from a well-used track and in a
tree-hollow in a live tree (not a dead tree stump at about chest height as seen
last year), again about 1.5m off the ground. I'll keep an eye on how long the
eggs last before some keen tourist samples them ... and whether she will re-lay
... again?
Robert
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