And on the other side of the town common, a female Red-Rump is using a metal
hollow inside the high overhang of one of Crows Nest's newest buildings. Seems
to be a species culture here.
JLA
This note's from the mobile.
Reply to:
Begin forwarded message:
> From: Judith L-A <>
> Date: 30 September 2016 at 2:57:33 PM AEST
> To:
> Subject: Fwd: unusual / adaptive nest
>
> Both birds sweep in again, & onto the top of the 2nd pediment. The male feeds
> the female copiously, then both fly off again. Perhaps the nest is not
> complete yet? Though certainly the female spent plenty of time in/at it,
> earlier...
>
> JLA
> This note's from the mobile.
> Reply to:
>
>
> Begin forwarded message:
>
>> From: Judith L-A <>
>> Date: 30 September 2016 at 2:34:41 PM AEST
>> To:
>> Subject: unusual / adaptive nest
>>
>> Red-rumpled Parrot --
>>
>> In the centre of Crows Nest town (Qld), a pair of Red-rumps nesting inside
>> the fascia-pediment of an old brick shop. A couple of metres away, in the
>> opposite crevice-corner, sparrows are nest-building.
>>
>> No date on the building, but architectural signs of age outside & in, &
>> signs of repair/exclusion attempts in the paired crevice-corners of both
>> pediments.
>>
>> The brown female goes in, while the bright male flits about on the cornice
>> above, twittering, till finally he takes to the powerline, calls her out, &
>> they dash away together.
>>
>> JLA
>> This note's from the mobile.
>> Reply to:
>>
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