Apparently a new walking trail was constructed close to the Deny King
hide and could potentially disturb the parrots too much from feeding,
therefore discouraging their use of the feed table. A temporary hide
with feed table has been constructed S of the airstrip on the trail to
Cox's Bight (from www.facebook.com/savetheobp).
Grace
On Dec 9, 8:00 am, David Stowe <> wrote:
> Hi Ashwin,
> Thanks very much for this info!
> As someone hoping to get down there this summer I'd love to know more about
> the situation if anyone can shed more light?
>
> Cheers
> David Stowe
> On 08/12/2011, at 11:53 PM, Ashwin Rudder wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> > Hi all,
>
> > I thought it might interest a lot of you, especially those planning on
> > going after the Orange-bellied Parrots at Melaleuca this summer, that the
> > feeding tray infront of the hide has been removed. The stumps remain, but
> > the wooden platform has been broken up, and now resides under the floor of
> > the hide, along with the whiteboard that has the band combinations for the
> > individual birds. Why this has happened I have no idea, and the two
> > permanent residents' response when I asked them was "Who knows?". I can
> > only speculate that the people in charge of the recovery program have
> > decided that the impact on the birds of people in the hide was greater than
> > the benefits of having birders voluntarily reporting the bands that they
> > saw.
>
> > What worries me is more that the birds now no longer have a very reliable
> > food source. I hope the birds have not been abandoned as a lost cause. I
> > was further worried to see three Starlings near one of the nest boxes. The
> > parrots have quite enough to worry about elsewhere in their range, surely
> > it would not be hard to eradicate a few starlings now, rather than let them
> > proliferate and become a major problem, out-competing the parrots for the
> > nest boxes.
>
> > For those still heading down, the birds are still there. They are nesting
> > in, or inspecting a number of nest-boxes that are prominent, and in easy
> > view. Early-ish morning, I found to be the best time, and the easiest way
> > to see them is to hear them flying overhead, and watch for where they land,
> > then follow. But I would definitely consider ensuring you go down for more
> > than just a single day. Further, there are other birds to be seen, and I
> > had excellent views of Striated Fieldwren, Beautiful Firetail, Southern Emu
> > Wren, and Olive Whistler.
>
> > Best regards,
> > Ashwin Rudder
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