Friday, February 1, 2019

Australian Wildlife - Birds, Birds, Birds (and a nice surprise)


BIRDS! BIRDS! BIRDS!  And a nice surprise
There is hardly a single bird in Australia that is also in the US, so virtually every bird you see will be new to you.  Raven and Pelican, yes, but they are Australian ravens and pelicans, so they are different in appearance and sometimes behavior.  And because it is warm and tropical for the most part here, there are birds in abundance.  
Every day clouds of Rainbow Lorikeets blow past us on their way to roost in the palm trees at night.  Their favorite trees are downtown and when they all arrive, the noise is deafening! But as darkness falls, the worm turns, so to speak.  The birds tuck their heads under their wings and peace reigns.  Then the nightclubs open and the thump, thump, thump of music shakes the ground and must surely vibrate the trees full of Lorikeets. 


Sleeping Rainbow Lorikeets 
And the Sulfur-crested Cockatoos have their moments of madness in the evening -- screaming past overhead, sometimes blowing our hair with their wind.
Sulphur-crested Cockatoo screaming



Sulphur-crested Cockatoo quiet
And I do mean screaming.  No sane person who saw these birds in the wild would ever 
think of bringing one into their house to live.  They simply do not grasp the meaning of an inside voice.  The "talk" to each constantly at a level that is positively ear-splitting!  And if you watch them, the first thing they do when they land is to begin shredding whatever they are on -- a tree limb, someone's roof.  To have a tree in your yard that is a favorite of, say, the local 100 of these birds, would not be a good thing.
Nearly every bird here makes some kind of remarkable sound.  Crying puppies?  The Rainbows cooing before sleep.  The plaintive, heart-breaking uh . . . ohhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh?  
Ravens.  They can put an amazing human quality into their calls.

 Australian Raven

And the beautiful,  haunting call of a loon on a mountain lake?  Currawongs.  While they have a wicked look with their yellow eyes, they are lovely, funny birds and one of our favorites for their personalities.

Currawong


Another favorite, the Superb Fairy Wren.  So, tiny and delicate, they could not weigh much more than a postage stamp. We called them Tinkerbells.   The males stay close to their group of females and flash their beautiful iridescent blue faces at you.

Male Superb Fairy Wren


Female Superb Fairy Wren
We could find something to say about each of them, but then we are birders and you probably aren't, so here are some Bob's pictures.

Australian Pelicans

Satin Fly-catcher

 Noisy Friarbird

 Red Wattlebird

Purple Swamphen

Laughing Kookaburra

Laughing Kookaburra

Pacific Black Duck

Yellow-Tailed Black-Cockatoo

Little Grebe

Grey Butcherbird

Lewin's Honeyeater

Grey Fantail

White-throated Treecreeper


Crimson Rosella

Crimson Rosellas

Wedge-tailed Eagle

Masked Lapwing

Sulphur-crested Skateboarder

Australian White Ibis

Magpie-lark

Eastern White-cheeked Rosella

Crested Pigeon

Little Corella

Little Wattlebird

New Holland Honeyeater

Noisy Miner

Red-browed Firetail Finch


A Lovely Surprise



Bob had tried numerous times to find Dean on the Internet before we got here without success.  Dean was a young man who was a particular favorite of Bob's family when they lived here in the late 80s.  Dean was a talented surfer and became very well-known in the surfing world here.  I suggested he try again from here and sure enough, Bob almost immediately found an article in a surfing publication.  He emailed the author and convinced him that he did actually know "Deano" and he in turn sent Dean's email to Bob.  Dean was living about an hour and a half north in Avalon.  We arranged to meet him at a local restaurant and spent several hours visiting with him.
What a treat to meet this fine man!  In some ways, not changed from the kid with the big smile Bob described to me, but very changed in other ways.  He was young surfer in the 80s and a very good one and it would have been easy for such a young man to spend 30 years just surfing.  But he did not, choosing instead to work hard and become a successful man with a lovely wife, twin sons and a daughter at the center of his life.  He has done very well in business and, as so many Australians do, has traveled widely with his family.  Another high point in our Australian odyssey and one we won't forget.



 

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