Azure Kingfisher in Ku-ring-gai Chase Park near Sydney

Today I visited Bobbin Head in Ku-ring-gai Chase National Park. I started at the Mangrove Boardwalk, then followed the Gibberagong track along Cockle Creek. It’s a lovely walk. Quiet and cool.

At one point I started hearing something plopping into the water at regular intervals. A flash of colour swooped up into a tree. I stopped to watch. It was a tiny bird, shining blue and orange. Only the long zoom of my camera revealed what I was seeing.

An Azure Kingfisher, sitting on a rock, waiting for prey to pass by in the river below:

Azure Kingfishers are common further north in Australia, but are uncommon this far south due to loss of habitat. They like banks of creeks with lots of vegetation and mangroves. This area of Ku-ring-gai Chase National Park certainly fits the bill.

The next video shows the bird diving into the water. It’s far away, so all you get is an impression, but it’s pretty to watch:

Here’s a still shot of the bird – fuzzy because of the max zoom on my camera:

Kingfishers are related to kookaburras. (See my previous post about a wet kookaburra.) At only 17-19 centimetres long, this kingfisher is a tiny cousin of the Laughing Kookaburra, which comes in at a whopping 40-47 centimetres.

The next photo gives a good idea of the very short length of the tail, which is an identifying mark of this bird:

Common name: Azure Kingfisher

Scientific name: Alcedo azurea

Approximate length: 18 cm

Date spotted: 28 August 2019 (late winter)

Location: Bobbin Head, Ku-ring-gai Chase National Park, New South Wales, Australia: 33°40’10.5″S 151°08’54.9″E

About Sarah Maddox

Technical writer, author and blogger in Sydney

Posted on 2019/08/28, in Birds, Kingfisher and tagged , , , , , , . Bookmark the permalink. 3 Comments.

  1. Pamela Clark

    love it, thanks for the post

  2. DEBRA KRAUSE

    We live around the Jervis BayNSW South coast area is it uncommon that the Azure Kingfisher to be this far south or could it have got here by human intervention? It hit our window and stunned its self was able to get close up picture before it flew away. Lived here for 30 years never seen such a stunning bird the colours were electric.

    • Hallo Debra
      How lovely that you managed to see one up close, and also that it recovered and flew away! According to my bird book, it’s uncommon to see them this far south.
      Cheers
      Sarah

Leave a comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.