birding-aus

Hunter Estuary 18-19 March 2006

To: "'alan morris'" <>
Subject: Hunter Estuary 18-19 March 2006
From: "Edwin Vella" <>
Date: Mon, 20 Mar 2006 21:47:01 +1100
Hi Alan and others

I saw many more waders far away on the dykes (which I did not count) but
as I had limited time and could not wait till the tide was low which
meant that I missed seeing several and numbers of species.

I wish I could have waited with the numbers you saw.

Cheers!

Edwin

-----Original Message-----
From: 
 On Behalf Of alan morris
Sent: Monday, 20 March 2006 11:22 AM
To: 
Cc: Drew Morris; Tim Morris; Murray Lord; Almarosa
Subject: Hunter Estuary 18-19 March 2006

Hi Birdewrs,
On reading Edwin's report of his visit on Sunday to the Hunter Estuary
it is 
therefore of interest to record the experience of 8 of us who were part
of a 
two day Follow That Bird Tour to the Hunter Estuary.

On the Saturday our first stop was Pambalong Swamp, where the usual 
waterbirds were found but there were good raptors,  including 2
Wedge-tailed 
Eagles, a Little Eagle, a Swamp Harrier & a Peregrine, and a Black Duck
with 
7 ducklings. A brief stop at Leneghans Flat Swamp found11 Glossy Ibis.

At Ash Island 1200-13530 hrs, plenty of Black-winged Stilts,
Greenshanks, a 
few Marsh and Sharp-tailed Sandpipers, a single Black-tailed Godwit with
the 
Stilts, 2 Black-shouldered Kite, 2 Whistling Kites, 4 Sea-eagles & a 
Kestrel. Alas once again, no Yellow Wagtails!

We visited Stockton Sandspit 1500-1630 hrs, with the tide already half
out 
and saw many waders, the highlights being 14 Gull-billed Terns, 4
Mongolian 
(Lesser-sand) Plovers, 1 Double-banded Plover,  8-10 Terek Sandpipers, 5
Red 
Knots and the Broad-billed Sandpiper was again found where it was seen
two 
weeks before. Most Avocets had already returned to the feeding areas
with 
only a few hundred left for us to see and Black-tailed Godwits were the 
commonest large wader feeding there.  At the Stockton wreck we saw 3 
Grey-tailed Tattlers.

On the Sunday we did a boat cruise on Newcastle Harbour, proceeding
first to 
the Harbour entrance hoping to see some Jaegers, but again none present,
but 
there were aprox 800 Wedge-tailed Shearwaters sitting together on the
water 
surface, the water being very calm and still. We went through the flock
and 
they barely move away, amongst them was one lone Fleshy-footed
Shearwater. 
Some Common Terns, a Striated Heron and a few Darters were the only
birds of 
interest. We returned to the harbour making our way to the Kooragang
Island 
dykes where the waders roost at high tide. On passing the Stockton wreck
we 
saw 24 Golden Plover and 14 Grey-tailed Tattelrs roosting nearby but no 
Common Sandpipers.

At the dykes we saw c 300 Black-tailed Godwits, c. 1000 Bar-tailed
Godwits 
many coming into breeding plumage, 206 Pacific Golden Plovers, 78 
Greenshanks,  40+ Curlew Sandpipers, 4+ Marsh Sandpipers, 4 Sooty 
Oystercatchers, 3 Pied Oystercatchers, a few Whimbrel, 300+ Eastern
Curlew, 
8 Red Knot, 5 Great Knot, a Striated Heron and a Whistling Kite
delibertaely 
and dramatically put all the waders to flight as it flew the length of
the 
Dykes!

We did a trip up Moschito Creek, Kooragang island  and saw little except
for 
5 Sea-Eagles and 2 Whistling Kites, and on returning to the Dykes about
an 
hour later again saw 3A & 1 immature Sea-eagles in the air at once.
Nothing 
else special on the dykes this time apart from about 14 Caspian Terns.

A longer stop at Leneghans Flat Swamp on the return home enabled us to 
count16 Glossy Ibis, 52 Shoveler, 6 Sharp-tailed Sandpiper and 1
immature 
Wandering Whistle-Duck amongst the many waterbirds present.

It is interesting to note the differnce between the birds we saw at the
same 
sites as Edwin visited!

Alan Morris 

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