My backyard buddies were there for me on the shortest day of the year, lifting my spirits as I headed out into the cold. The winter solstice rite I call it, summoning all my energy to do a lengthy bird count in the garden as I sense the cosmic tide is turning, winter is on the way out, spring beckons. I don’t need my watch, or the calendar to feel change in the air. There’s something innate and primordial, visceral, that sets my seasonal body clock. It’s most apparent in … [Read more...] about Birdsong greets the winter solstice
On The Wing
Passport to birdland
Birdland is a magical place where it’s possible to escape all the pressures and stresses of the environment of the city created and inhabited by one species – humans – and immerse yourself in a less one-dimensional world. Birdland is nowhere in particular, and does not have to be special or noteworthy. It could be in the wildest of wild forest, or in suburbia. It could be a pristine beach, a few hectares of eucalypt woodland, or a neatly manicured city park. It could be a backyard. That’s the magic of birds; they bring beauty and wonder to every corner of the planet, wild or untamed, and my On the Wing writing is their celebration.
Love and devotion – a human story
As I watched black swans shrouded in the mists of a Bridgewater Jerry on the upper Derwent, I could see why the beautiful and graceful birds have always formed a powerful, almost spiritual image through the haze of human history. Swans are symbols of love, devotion and fidelity. There are plenty of fairy tales about swans mating for life, and even grieving for years if their beloved partner dies. Scientists in Melbourne have now confirmed it's one myth that has some truth … [Read more...] about Love and devotion – a human story
Bird of play in the spotlight
The children had long departed after the sun began to fade on a glorious autumnal afternoon but a youngster was still at play on the soft, wet sands of Long Beach, Lower Sandy Bay. A juvenile silver gull played “boats” with a leaf, which it dropped and then retrieved from ripples of waves sweeping the shore. I was intrigue by the bird’s behaviour at the tideline. The leaf had been blown into the sea and it was being washed ashore by the waters of the incoming tide. The … [Read more...] about Bird of play in the spotlight
The mysterious bunyip unmasked
The call of the bunyip echoes from Tasmania’s ancient past. A low-pitched boom resonates on balmy, summer nights from wetlands fringed with reeds. Unsettling and unnerving, it’s no wonder that Aboriginal peoples across the country feared the sound, believing it evoked malign and sinister spirits. But these days the bunyip has been unmasked. It’s now accepted the bunyip of Aboriginal folklore is the bittern, a nocturnal member of the heron family that skulks in … [Read more...] about The mysterious bunyip unmasked
A cool Pacific gull takes life in its stride
A penny for your thoughts, I’m saying to a Pacific gull. I’m intrigued. I’ve watched this lone gull for months. I can’t make him out. Where he comes from, where he goes? All I know is that every time I go to the Waterworks Reserve, I see him basking in the sun on an embankment overlooking one of the twin reservoirs. At first, in the early days, I thought the Pacific gull might be sick or injured. But he always looked in great shape, crisp-white plumage which he obviously … [Read more...] about A cool Pacific gull takes life in its stride