Notes to readers of this Blog


NOTES TO READERS OF THIS BLOG

Thank you for dropping by to check out my blog. You will see a lot of other Blogs about birds I follow down the left hand side. I strongly encourage you to check some of these out as well, they are entertaining and I love to see birds from all over the world, I hope you do too.
Cheers,
Richard

Friday, 18 November 2011

Wiggly's Waterhole

It has been a quiet few weeks with work and home life keeping the bird watching to a minimum. I decided to spend a long lunch out at Wiggly's Waterhole as the 13 - 15 hour work days were keeping me either inside an office or inside the car and I needed to get out to the rocks, hills, trees and birds, if only for a short time.
Driving into the Waterhole area, the grasses are still quite long and very dry, and some of the insects are as big as the small birds fluttering around the flowering trees. 
I hung around the first part of the waterhole for a little while, listening mainly to Grey Shrike-thrushes calling and singing to one another. Grey-crowned Babblers, Australian Ringnecks and Brown, White-plumed, Singing and Spiny-cheeked Honeyeaters were abundant.Willie Wagtails and Magpie Larks were also very friendly and noisy. As I walked along the north side towards the larger waterhole, both White-faced and White-necked Herons flew off from the shallows below the bank. The White-faced flew accommodatingly parallel to my position:
I also managed to spook a Grey Teal and then as I rounded the last few trees at the larger waterhole, Little Black and Pied Cormorants flew off. A Great Egret also didn't last long as it flew off to the top of a nearby tree:
I wandered down to the waters edge on the opposite bank from where the cormorants and egret had flown. Some Magpie Larks didn't seem to fussed about me, and thankfully, neither was a Yellow-billed Spoonbill. It was a few trees along from where the Egret had flown and seemed fairly happy for me to take photos of it sitting quietly, then having a yawn and finally it must have thought I'd had enough photos and it flew off:



I continued on "up river" and came across a group of fairy-wrens. One of the young is in the middle of a moult towards adulthood, a scruffy looking Variegated Fairy-wren:

It was all too soon time to return to work, but a very pleasant long lunch was enjoyed.

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