THE hot-chip brigade – the gulls that try to steal our fast food on the waterfront – might be viewed as a nuisance but they are a vital indicator of the heath of the human environment. They are certainly not “rats with wings”, to use a pejorative description used by some members of the community who are not gull fans. Such is the regard that birders give gulls that a dedicated team of Birdlife Tasmania members each year conducts a survey of gull numbers far and wide to … [Read more...] about Gulls enjoy the good life
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Rosellas join the winter feast
I camped out on the Domain at dusk last month to witness the amazing Dark Mofo light show spreading across the city – only to find the birds putting on a winter spectacle of their own. Birds were definitely not on the agenda after I lingered outside the Aquatic Centre after a keep-fit swim to see the Articulated Intersect art installation from a vantage point high above the city. I was a little early, and with time to kill I watched the sun set behind Mt Wellington, the dark … [Read more...] about Rosellas join the winter feast
Looks aren’t everything
In a fast-paced, fast-changing world there is something wonderfully reassuring about the predictability of birds and their place in the environment. ``All’s well with the world,” I always mutter to myself when I find the superb fairy-wren, the new holland honeyeater or green rosella where I expect them to be. With a little time on my hands at Lake Barrington in the north-west earlier this year I decided to take a stroll to an area of dry woodland on the lake’s shores where … [Read more...] about Looks aren’t everything
A little friend in need
The tiny marsupial blinked through pin-prick, shining eyes. I was blocking his path as he tried to scurry into the undergrowth on Mt Wellington. Sharing a track with a dusky antechinus half-way up the mountain, we had both been caught out by a sudden change in the weather that brought a blizzard swirling around the peaks to the south. I did not have a winter coat, or a hat but my problems paled into insignificance when I considered those of the antechinus. A brown falcon … [Read more...] about A little friend in need
In the footsteps of John Glover
Birds are our living link with the past and when I follow in the footsteps of the Victorian artist John Glover on a favourite track on Knocklofty above Hobart I think of the honeyeaters, the robins and flycatchers serenading him as he went on his way. The last time I walked the track the black-headed honeyeaters were in full voice – as they would have been in Glover’s time – and their piping calls rang through the canopy of wattle and gum on what is officially known as the … [Read more...] about In the footsteps of John Glover