Hi Paul,
Well done to you and Ruth! 366 / 380 !! Wow, what a great effort! When I did my
first VicTwitch in 2006 I said that anybody who gets over 350 would have to go
'totally sick'. Considering the total that you've got, 'totally insane' is a
far more apt description.
Looking at your list I reckon you've still got a realistic chance at seeing:
. Baillon's Crake - worth trying Banyule Flats - but you may need to get wet.
I've done this several times. Also Blue Lake Reserve at Ocean Grove, Lake
Wendouree, Mill Park Lakes.
. Crimson Chat - I saw one this year on the Meridian Track at northern
Wyperfeld in Sept, so there's a few about. Of course it is worth trying Goschen
& Lake Tutchewop. We didn't see them on the Twitchathon, but that was over a
month ago. Also a couple of km down Trinita Rd and near Shearers Quaters in
Murray Sunset National.
. Little Bittern - recently seen Hirds Swamp, and worth a night time trip to
Mill Park Lakes or Eastern Treatment Plant, where, if they are about, you
should hear them.
. Masked Owl - another Gippsland trip again, again! I've also had a report near
the Cape Otway Lighthouse (a few km before the lighthouse in the areas where
all the Koala's hang out) and, of course, behind Lorne.
. Red-backed Kingfisher - let's hope a bird or two turns up near Rutherglen.
During the Twitchathon my team thought we may have heard one at the You Yangs,
but didn't have time to follow up.
. Australian Pratincole - at Terrick2 I reckon there'd bound to be one or two
in grasslands along Bendigo Creek at the moment.
. Long-toed Stint - one is bound to turn up at the Conservation Pond
(north-east corner) before NYE.
. Australian Painted Snipe - best Hird Swamp and Kerang Lakes generally, and I
assume you've gone for the pair at Tree Swamp and Ganers Swamp near Corop.
Also possibly:
. King Quail - if you're willing to do a French Island thing i.e. near Long
Swamp and along Link Road.
. Inland Dotterel - you would need to plan a night-time search of the chenopod
shrublands at Ned's Corner. I've seen them there at night (at 3:00am in the
morning, after returning from an unscheduled trip the Mildura Hospital!) along
Ned's Corner Rd.
. Australian Bustard - I'd give up on Australian Bustard near Southern
Wyperfeld, and that way you might actually see one! For example Greg Oakley in
2006 saw one near Kerang.
. Cape Gannet - I'm not sure what the current status of Cape Gannet at Portland.
. Also also Indian Peafowl, there are a few places in Vic where Indian Peafowl
are found (such as bordering Newlyn Res). You could go and see them and add
them to a supplementary list i.e. not your final official/final List. For
example last year I had 10 species I'd "seen" but didn't include (some for
obvious reasons) including Great-winged Petrel, Wedge-tailed Shearwater, Plumed
Whistling-Duck, Indian Peafowl (Newlyn Res), Sooty Owl, Mandarin Duck,
Wandering Albatross, Southern Giant-Petrel, Common Diving-Petrel and Little
Stint.
. And the odd rarity might turn up - last year if you remember we had Eastern
Yellow Wagtail and Hudsonian Godwit.
My advice for you and Ruth - you still have plenty of time to go totally crazy
(and see up to 390)!
Cheers,
Tim Dolby
-----Original Message-----
From:
On Behalf Of Paul G Dodd
Sent: Monday, 13 December 2010 9:45 PM
To:
Subject: VicTwitch 2010
Hi birding-aussers,
Some of you may know - especially if you follow us on Twitter or Facebook -
Ruth and I have spent this year chasing Tim Dolby's VicTwitch record. Last
year Tim managed to see 345 species in Victoria (excluding pelagic trips).
This year Ruth and I have seen 380 species in Victoria (including pelagic
trips - about 366 excluding pelagic trips).There are a number of species
that we have not yet managed to see, but there are still 18 days left of
this year!
Following is the list of species from the Victorian list that we have not
seen this year. We certainly don't expect to see them all, but we're both
taking the last two weeks of the year off and intend to devote ourselves to
getting as many of the remaining species as possible.
We would appreciate any assistance with finding any of these species. If
anyone has reasonably recent sightings of any of them, could you please let
us know?
Thanks in advance!
Paul Dodd
Docklands, Victoria
King Quail
Indian Peafowl
Common Pheasant (unsure if this is on the Victorian list)
Grey-headed Albatross
Sooty Albatross
Light-mantled Sooty Albatross
Southern Fulmar
Kerguelen Petrel
White-headed Petrel
Mottled Petrel
Cook's Petrel
Gould's Petrel
Salvin's Prion
Flesh-footed Shearwater
Wedge-tailed Shearwater
Little Shearwater
Cape Gannet
Little Bittern
Black Bittern
Osprey
Letter-winged Kite
Baillon's Crake
Australian Bustard
Oriental Plover
Inland Dotterel
Semi-palmated Plover
Sandpipers and Allies
Terek Sandpiper
Little Stint
Long-toed Stint
Red-necked Phalarope
Australian Pratincole
Oriental Pratincole
Plains-wanderer
Australian Painted Snipe
South Polar Skua
Long-tailed Jaeger
Masked Owl
Red-backed Kingfisher
Crimson Chat
Ground Cuckoo-shrike
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