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Home tweet home.

To: "<>" <>
Subject: Home tweet home.
From: Michael Hunter <>
Date: Sun, 6 Oct 2019 15:10:54 +1100
Just back from an amazing but bird- poor tour of California looking at its 
remarkable trees, including many "champions", ranging from awesome Redwoods and 
Sequoias through scores of conifers, including the worlds oldest living 
single-trunked tree, the Bristlecone Pine, almost 5000 years old according to 
tree ring counts, looking like a giant bonsai with mainly dead branches but 
some green branches persisting.
Also the Monterey Pine and Monterey Cypress, once very restricted to the 
Monterey Peninsula, but now world- wide, the Pine called Radiata in Oz.
Also many lovely Oaks, Washingtonia fan palms, a  common ornamental  in Oz, and 
literally thousands in Palm Springs' parks and gardens as far as the eye can 
see, it is a big  city, with almost no high-rise buildings which might obscure 
views of the enveloping mountains.. A small oasis  out of town had wild 
Livistonias,with thick " petticoats" of dead leaves down to the ground.   Birds 
nest in these but we saw none.
    Did see three large  quail-like birds without crests at a stop just east of 
Pam Springs, not Roadrunners as our tree guide hopefully surmised, and probably 
an introduced game bird.

Nearish to Palm Springs in the high altitude Mojave  desert, thousands of 
Joshua trees, (giant Yuccas) difficult to age because they have fibrous trunks 
and no tree rings. the oldest thousands of years old. No birds seen.

Overall we saw mostly American Crows, a few Turkey Vultures (nice), Bluebirds 
in Napa Valley near a vineyard, one Bewicks Wren, a few LBJs, occasional 
Woodpeckers in the Redwoods. One Great Blue Heron.
Also Brown Pelicans, "cormorants" California and Heermans and Herring Gulls 
plus Seals otters and huge Sealions along the coast north  of LA.
   This was not a specifically birding trip, but on several previous California 
tours to some of the same places we saw many more species.


   It was like birding Heaven as we drove up the drive home in Mulgoa, 
Scarlet Honeyeaters calling all the time, YFHoneyeaters,Galahs,Corellas,   
White Cockatoos, Ravens Magpies  and Currawongs. wrens and finches doves and 
Blackbirds, even Swamphens around the house, all revelling in Spring and adding 
an audible  as well as visible dynamic background.
  The only downside; presumably a Sulphur-crested Cockatoo has eaten out the 
growing point of a prized Aloe. Apart from strangling or other forms of 
euthanasia, all illegal, can anyone suggest how to control these birds?

     Cheers

       Michael
Sent from my iPhone
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