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Trip Report - Bellarine Peninsula, Port Campbell, and Altona, Victoria -

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Subject: Trip Report - Bellarine Peninsula, Port Campbell, and Altona, Victoria - 7/10 - 9/10/7
From: "Troy Mutton" <>
Date: Sun, 14 Oct 2007 11:33:07 +1000
Hi all,

Have been in Melbourne for work for the last week, and was able to spend a few 
days before what I had to do to go birding. Picked up my hire car early Sunday 
morning 7/10 and drove around Geelong, finding a likely looking place at Lake 
Lorne. Good numbers of ducks here, with the highlight being 2 Freckled, 1 Blue 
Billed and 2 Pink eared Ducks. Also a Swamp Harrier harrassing a pair of Black 
Swans and their chicks. It looked like it was trying to swipe a chick, and was 
quite interesting to watch. A Brown Falcon also did a flyby. A good start to 
the trip. After I'd had my fill, I decided to head over to Barwon Heads - there 
wasn't much about, apart from hundreds of people, but I did waste a lot of time 
chasing down a Pacific Gull to get a decent photo. A few Stints and Red-capped 
Plovers on the beach, and not alot in the lake. Headed over to Belmont Common 
after that, where the highlight was a Purple Swamphen flushing a Latham's Snipe 
immediately in front of the hide! The Common is very full at the moment, and 
I'm looking forward to a return visit in a couple of months when it will 
hopefully have a bit more mud about the edges. Off to Hospital Swamp after 
that, and as it was really full, and getting late I just went down the public 
access road to see about 2000 Black Swans, and that was about all I could 
easily make out on the water. There was a Horsfield's Bronze Cuckoo calling off 
to the east. I know it was a Horsfield's as I saw the diagnostic red spot on 
the tail - just jokes. It allowed me good extended views through the scope. 
Good book by the way Mr Dooley.

Next day was off to Lock Ard Gorge to try for Rufous Bristlebird, and despite 
the belting rain on the way, as I pulled the car in at the carpark, there was 
one on the edge. Great views of it with bins, but as soon as the camera was 
out, it took off. Walked around to the Arch and once again, as I came back to 
the car there was one on the path, but as soon as the camera was up, it 
disappeared. There was also a Peregrine Falcon and Singing Honeyeaters about at 
Loch Ard Gorge. Off to Lake Gherang to see the Brolga, which I didn't see. 
There were Gull-billed and Whiskered Terns there, some Sharpies, Curlew Sands 
and a couple of other waders that I couldn't ID, they were just a little bit 
too far away. In my mind I was turning them into all sorts of fantastic birds, 
but in all reality, they probably weren't. I suspect that there was at least 
one Pectoral Sandpiper there, and I have no idea what the other 6 were. I 
digiscoped them, but very poorly, and you can't make out what they are.

Last day saw me out at the Swan Island mudflats at about 5.30 am with the low 
tide. Birds out and about feeding included Eastern Curlew, both Bar-tailed and 
Black-tailed Godwits, Royal Spoonbill, and a possible Greenshank. It was a good 
100 metres away, but took to bobbing its head in alarm when I trained the scope 
on it. I stooged around trying to get the camera out to take a digi shot of it, 
and by the time I was ready to take more (poor) photos, it was gone. Anyway - 
off to Point Cook to see the Blue-winged Parrots at Spectacle Lake, and see 
them I did. Magnificent birds. They all got scared and flew away as I drove in, 
and I was a bit disappointed to think that that was going to be my only, 
fleeting view of them, however as I walked in to the hide, they started to 
flyby and perch in nearby trees, and stayed around for the rest of the morning. 
There was a pair of White-fronted Chats near the bird-hide - a tick for me and 
one I hadn't even thought about before going there, and inside the hide, on the 
right hand slot under the swallow nest, a Black-tailed Native-Hen put in a 
show. There wasn't much else going on at the hide, so I headed off to Cheetham 
Wetlands. On the circuit there were Rufous Songlark, Singing Honeyeater, a 
Striated Fieldwren, and a pair of heart-attack inducing Brown Quail. It had 
been so peaceful just walking along listening to the birds that the explosion 
of them flushing nearly killed me. At the tower were 3 Pallid Cuckoos, and lots 
of Whiskered Terns feeding. There was also a huge flock of waders that got up 
and did a circuit, but they were too far away to ID.

Off to Altona after that. There was around 30 Whiskered Terns at the creek 
mouth at the southern end of Apex Park (I don't know the name of the creek 
though!), 3 Pacific Gulls, 10 Royal Spoonbills and 3 Little Egrets, among the 
Crested Terns and Silver Gulls. Also saw a Spotted Pardalote on the walk to the 
creek mouth. At Cherry Lake, Altona, there wasn't much of anything, although 
there was a pair of female Zebra Finches - would these be escapees or 
"legitimate", wild birds? On the more wooded NE side of the lake was a single 
male White-winged Triller. That was the end of the trip.

I would like to thank everyone for reporting their sightings and trip reports 
to birding-aus and the local birdlines, as it gave me something to base my 
visit around.

All up 102 species over 3 days, including 5 ticks made for a great few days 
birding. If anyone wants a full species list, feel free to email me and I'll 
send something on.

Cheers
Troy
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