An invitation to visit a boutique winery where wedge-tailed eagles are a regular feature was too good to turn down. So on a fine late-winter morning, with a hot sun promising spring, I drove the meandering Lyell Highway though the upper Derwent Valley to reach Rylelands farm just past Rossgarten. There to meet me was Derek Jones who a few days previously had phoned to say that he had just seen wedge-tailed eagles in a love dance above his farm, and then mating at the top of … [Read more...] about A vintage day of bird-watching
Blog
‘Pandemic bird’ steals the show
Birds are always around us, always in view, always within hearing. Although most times they were merely on the periphery of sight and sound, the covid pandemic has put our feathered friends in the spotlight. With lockdowns and restricted travel, we have turned our attention to our immediate environment as never before, discovering what’s literally on our doorstep. Record numbers of people took part in the Bird of the Year poll, in which the superb fairy-wren was declared the … [Read more...] about ‘Pandemic bird’ steals the show
Fanning the flames of passion
I search for the beautiful flame robin in spring and invariably turn up its close relative, the scarlet robin. It makes me wonder if my illustrious predecessor Michael Sharland got it wrong when he wrote in his Tasmanian Birds of 1948 that the flame robin was the family member most likely to be seen in Tasmania. Either this, or things have changed on the robin front in the past seventy-odd years.’ Although I see and hear scarlet robins all the time on the green fringes of … [Read more...] about Fanning the flames of passion
Migrants keep the birders waiting
The migratory birds have played a waiting game this spring. Usually small numbers of summer visitors begin to arrive from mid-August and numbers build up in the first few weeks of September. This year, however, I have had to ask: where are the cuckoos, the swallows, the martins and the summerbirds, the latter more formally known as black-faced cuckoo-shrikes? True, there had been sporadic sightings of swallows and fan-tailed cuckoos but the great spring migration appeared … [Read more...] about Migrants keep the birders waiting
Magpie ‘terror’ stalks the suburbs
It’s magpie attack time and a particularly aggressive bird is ruffling diplomatic feathers in Canberra. Usually I listen for maggie stories from Tasmania during spring but my attention has been drawn to a breach of entente cordial between the human and natural world in our capital territory. Japan’s ambassador Yamagami Shingo has reported he lives in fear of magpies in the swooping season. In his latest blog about his role in Australia, “News from under the Southern … [Read more...] about Magpie ‘terror’ stalks the suburbs