By Birding-Aus, on January 11th, 2020% Plague birds and army birds As every autumn, also in 2019 Tromsø had an influx of Bohemian Waxwings in autumn, when the abundant Rowans (Mountain Ash, Sorbus aucuparia) have ripe berries. This year the harvest was not . . . → Read More: Plague birds and army birds
By Birding-Aus, on January 11th, 2020% Today I saw the Kentish Plover at Bonna point reserve at 2.15pm. Gps was -34.0075, 151.1881 Sent from my Samsung Galaxy smartphone.g
By Birding-Aus, on January 10th, 2020% There was a report yesterday of an unusual number of waterfowl on Lake Burley Griffin, so I had a look this morning. Remarkably, despite predictions, the air was the clearest it has been for about 3 weeks. One reason for the number of birds (several hundred) is that the lake is so low . . . → Read More: At Lake Burley Griffin
By Birding-Aus, on January 8th, 2020% I mentioned to Michael, but I’ll inflict this on all of you. The White Cedar is a favoured food of the western NSW population of Red-tailed Black-Cockatoo. I used to visit Bourke each winter just for the spectacle. If you left it too late there would not be a single fruiting W Cedar . . . → Read More: FW: Finished
By Birding-Aus, on January 7th, 2020% It is yet another irony that this scenic and interesting place is now associated by most Australians only with the sad and dramatic events of recent days. I made a short visit there last October driving back to Canberra from Melbourne. Martin Butterfield had suggested as a vantage point for shorebirds a spot . . . → Read More: Remembering Mallacoota
By Birding-Aus, on January 7th, 2020% –effectively shaping the tree to be quite compact. Despite it being very ornamental, with light green leaves, having delightfully scented lilac flowers in spring, being covered in yellow or orange berries, and almost always with birds in it, White Cedars are a very high maintenance proposition. They are deciduous, shed twigs, dead leaves and berries . . . → Read More: Unfinished
By Birding-Aus, on January 7th, 2020% White Cedars (Melia azedarach) are favourites of our local Currawong regurgitators, fouling every birdbath and fishpond in the garden Even water in house gutters, sprouting when they dry a sign that it’s time to clean th out. White Cedars (Persian lilacs), and we have one just outside the kitchen window, a spreading shady variety . . . → Read More: Regurgitation
By Birding-Aus, on January 6th, 2020% Our Grey Butcherbirds have for a number of years, particularly when raising young, visited for a hand out, generally a bit of mincemeat which they catch when it is tossed to them Often they park their reward in a forked tree branch and sit watching it, and after a minute or two, they regurgitate . . . → Read More: Bird baths: the regurgitation factor
By Birding-Aus, on January 6th, 2020% My local currawongs disgorge camphor laurel, privet and false tobacco seeds, which are our main pest weeds along the riverbanks in Gloucester. Sadly our rivers are no longer running. Perhaps first time ever. Certainly first time in living memory. ——————– Penny Brockman On Sun, 5 Jan 2020, at 10:51 AM, Anthea Fleming wrote: A . . . → Read More: Bird baths: the regurgitation factor
By Birding-Aus, on January 5th, 2020% A long time ago we had two fledgling Willy Wagtails in our care, and fed them on meal-worms. Some of the meal-worms turned into beetles, which the birds pursued and ate. They then regurgitated the hard wing-cases. Pied Currawongs regurgitate Pittosporum seeds and the hard kernels from pomegranates. They also eat the seeds from . . . → Read More: Bird baths: the regurgitation factor
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