I cannot recollect where or when I was told this, but I have heard of
camel riders occasionally observing small green parrots flushed from
spinifex. A camel makes no sound when walking and brushes against the
bushes, and the rider is at a convenient height to see anything flushed.
This of course comes in the hearsay category.
Anthea Fleming
On 23/04/2017 6:43 AM, Denise Goodfellow wrote:
> Over the years various the occasional truck driver has told me of sighting
> small, squat, green parrots while driving in outback Australia. Although
> I’ve not heard similar reports from road workers, it seems feasible that they
> too may have had such sightings. Why not survey this lot as well?
>
> Kind regards
>
> Denise
>
> On 20 Apr 2017, at 8:07 am, Anne Brophy <> wrote:
>
>> Dear Helen, Graeme and Peter,
>>
>> Surely there is a log or database of sightings ranging from the confirmed to
>> the mythological in regards to Night Parrots? John Young and others must
>> have used something along these lines to initiate their searches. A search
>> through the literature, museum records and that valuable commodity of
>> searches past, "heresay".
>>
>> Strikes me that now is the time to add the “heresay" and gossip to the
>> debate and see what patterns emerge. This must have been done by someone… if
>> not, in the age of social media, it is the time to start before its too late
>> and the “sources" are not available any more to living memory!
>>
>> Kind regards,
>> Anne
>>
>>> On 19 Apr 2017, at 16:04, Peter Shute <> wrote:
>>>
>>> Is there a central repository of all these possible/probably Night Parrot
>>> sightings? Given that a lot of them had until recently not much more
>>> credibility than a thylacine sighting, I wonder if most of them were never
>>> reported.
>>>
>>> Peter Shute
>>>
>>> Sent from my iPad
>>>
>>>> On 19 Apr 2017, at 2:07 pm, Graeme Chapman
>>>> <> wrote:
>>>>
>>>> Hello Helen,
>>>>
>>>> Your information about a sighting at Ardmore Station is quite important,
>>>> because that is not far from Devoncourt where there have also been
>>>> reports in the past.
>>>>
>>>> The ranges SW of Cloncurry may well be another "hot spot" for Night
>>>> Parrots, although a concerted search for them there some years ago was
>>>> unsuccessful.
>>>>
>>>> I know of two other "heresay" reports from that area, one of them a bird
>>>> caught in a mist net.
>>>>
>>>> Best wishes
>>>>
>>>> Graeme Chapman
>>>> <HR>
>>>> <BR> Birding-Aus mailing list
>>>> <BR>
>>>> <BR> To change settings or unsubscribe visit:
>>>> <BR> http://birding-aus.org/mailman/listinfo/birding-aus_birding-aus.org
>>>> </HR>
>>> <HR>
>>> <BR> Birding-Aus mailing list
>>> <BR>
>>> <BR> To change settings or unsubscribe visit:
>>> <BR> http://birding-aus.org/mailman/listinfo/birding-aus_birding-aus.org
>>> </HR>
>>
>> <HR>
>> <BR> Birding-Aus mailing list
>> <BR>
>> <BR> To change settings or unsubscribe visit:
>> <BR> http://birding-aus.org/mailman/listinfo/birding-aus_birding-aus.org
>> </HR>
> Denise Lawungkurr Goodfellow
> PO Box 71
> Darwin River, NT, Australia 0841
> 043 8650 835
>
> Founding Member: Ecotourism Australia
> Nominated by Earthfoot for Condé Nast’s International Ecotourism Award, 2004.
>
> Liaison Officer, NT Field Naturalists’ Club
> Winner, Individual Champion Award, Natural Resource Management, Northern
> Territory, Australia, 2016.
>
> With every introduction of a plant or animal that goes feral this continent
> becomes a little less unique, a little less Australian.
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> <HR>
> <BR> Birding-Aus mailing list
> <BR>
> <BR> To change settings or unsubscribe visit:
> <BR> http://birding-aus.org/mailman/listinfo/birding-aus_birding-aus.org
> </HR>
>
> ---
> This email has been checked for viruses by AVG.
> http://www.avg.com
>
<HR>
<BR> Birding-Aus mailing list
<BR>
<BR> To change settings or unsubscribe visit:
<BR> http://birding-aus.org/mailman/listinfo/birding-aus_birding-aus.org
</HR>
|