Mulgoa sightings

Hi All

Saw an immaculate BLACKSHOULDERED KITE in Mulgoa Valley yesterday, the first for perhaps twelve years Also two BLACK-FRONTED DOTTERELS, only one other sighting of those for a long time.

Otherwise plenty of bread and butter stuff, orioles, rose and yellow robins, sitellas, scrubwrens, superb and variegated wrens, grey thrushes, grey butcherbird, choughs, whipbirds calling, and still a cisticola plus redhead, double bar, spice and goldfinches et al

Things are returning to the pre-drought norm. Doesn’t take long!

Cheers Michael

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1 comment to Mulgoa sightings

  • "Geoff Leslie"

    Black-shouldered Kites are experiencing an irruption right across Western Victoria at present. During the bad drought years, they disappeared (along with Barn Owls). The coming of the wet brought a mouse plague (Autumn 2011) which I thought would bring them back in numbers, but it took a while. Last Summer, barn owls were very frequently seen (and killed) on roads at night; the BSKites returned and began to build. Now they are in dozens along all the roads I drive around Central and Western Victoria. Little wonder they’ve spread out to other areas as well. Meanwhile, we’ve lost our Black Kites; they seem to have moved away whereas they were the most common raptor during the drought. It is fascinating to watch the changes rung by the changing seasons.

    Geoff Leslie, Barham NSW

    Message-ID: <7DB21F89417148D88F581F264E155395@UserPC> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=”iso-8859-1″

    Hi All

    Saw an immaculate BLACKSHOULDERED KITE in Mulgoa Valley yesterday, the first for perhaps twelve years Also two BLACK-FRONTED DOTTERELS, only one other sighting of those for a long time.

    Otherwise plenty of bread and butter stuff, orioles, rose and yellow robins, sitellas, scrubwrens, superb and variegated wrens, grey thrushes, grey butcherbird, choughs, whipbirds calling, and still a cisticola plus redhead, double bar, spice and goldfinches et al

    Things are returning to the pre-drought norm. Doesn’t take long!

    Cheers Michael

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    To unsubscribe from this mailing list, send the message: unsubscribe (in the body of the message, with no Subject line)

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