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Donald Knowler

Dancing on the Edge of the World

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Gloria, the pandemic pet

May 2, 2020 Don Knowler

The race to embrace pets to ward off isolation during the Coronavirus crisis had me not looking at dogs and cats but a reliable favourite during times of stress – a female forest raven I call Gloria. Gloria was not about when the pandemic struck but she soon learned that I was spending more time at home than usual. She began to sit on the roof, cawing loudly in the early morning as soon as she detected movement inside the house. I was pleased to see her. During the past … [Read more...] about Gloria, the pandemic pet

On The Wing

Fantails fly to a different world

April 25, 2020 Don Knowler

The grey fantails, the males still in striking breeding plumage, came through on a southerly wind, the warm sun at their backs. I watched them spiralling and fluttering, fanning long black-and-white tails which resembled elongated shuttlecocks. I was a world away from the reality of fantail existence, the birds facing a perilous flight across Bass Strait to escape the Tasmanian winter. A potential peril of a different kind dominated my life: a pandemic, coronavirus, lurked … [Read more...] about Fantails fly to a different world

On The Wing

Cheery budgie brings comfort in ‘war’

April 19, 2020 Don Knowler

For more than 170 years the budgerigar has been a feathered friend in times of war, pain and pestilence. The budgerigar’s sweet chirping has been a source of comfort and hope for those that have these colourful, loyal parrots in their lives. Dogs and cats might be the most widely owned pets but when it comes to birds, the budgerigar rules the roost. As someone growing up in the aftermath of World War II, I’m reminded that the ubiquitous budgie helped keep Londoners sane … [Read more...] about Cheery budgie brings comfort in ‘war’

On The Wing

Swallows on a wing and a prayer

April 11, 2020 Don Knowler

The swallows have gone. No more flashing, swooping, soaring arrow shapes over the twin lakes at the Waterworks Reserve. I feel as empty as the skies, which are also clear of a swallow cousin, tree martins. The swallows and martins have left for their wintering grounds on the mainland, flying across Bass Strait to Victoria and possibly as far north as Queensland, where warmer temperatures over the winter months will ensure a supply of their flying insect food. It seemed … [Read more...] about Swallows on a wing and a prayer

On The Wing

‘Keep birding’ message in troubled times

April 4, 2020 Don Knowler

Every autumn when the cold weather begins to bite and I get the sniffles, my friends joke that I might have “bird flu”. The joke is wearing a little thin now in these days of Coronavirus, or Corvid-19, sweeping the world. Bird-watching is these troubled times has actually been far from my thoughts but the pandemic is occupying the mind of the two biggest bird-watching organisations in the world, the Audubon Society in the United States and Britain’s Royal Society for the … [Read more...] about ‘Keep birding’ message in troubled times

On The Wing

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PUBLISHED BOOKS

The Shy Mountain

shy mountain

Silent and brooding, the Shy Mountain does not have to speak her name. We know she’s there, watching … [Read More...]

The Falconer of Central Park

Although written more than 30 years ago, The Falconer of Central Park has remained popular ever … [Read More...]

Riding the Devil’s Highway

Tasmania might be known internationally as the home of the Hollywood cartoon character, Taz, based … [Read More...]

Dancing on the Edge of the World

Dancing on the edge of the World by Donald Knowler

Dancing on the Edge of the World is a collection of essays that had their genesis in the “On the … [Read More...]

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Recent Posts

  • Coots spring into romance
  • Gold at the end of the birding rainbow
  • Last stop on the shimmering way
  • Black-headed honeyeaters back in town
  • Goose almost cooked but it’s been saved
  • Pardalotes warm to the idea of a Tasmanian winter
  • Ballet on the mudflats as the world rushes by
  • Birdlife varieties a feather in city’s cap
  • Dry winter does not follow nature’s script
  • Winter poses growing poison threat to birds

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