Common Myna picks a millionaire’s view

You’ll see Common Myna birds, also called Indian Mynas, throughout Sydney. They strut around restaurant tables, colonise balconies, peek into windows, and generally act like they own the place. They’re not original natives of Australia, but they’re so common a sight that most people assume they’re a native species nowadays.

Often these birds look a little tatty, as if they’ve lived an interesting life. But a couple of days ago I saw this glossy bird roosting on the edge of a cliff at Dee Why Headland:

Zooming out, here’s the view that the bird is enjoying. If you look carefully, you’ll see the bird perched on the rocky outcrop at the bottom of the picture, to the middle right.

Not to be confused with the Australian Miner (“Noisy Miner”), the Common Mynas were introduced into Victoria in the late 1800s, to control the level of insects in market gardens. The birds have since made their way up the coast to New South Wales. Their original home is Asia (Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan, Iran, China, Indochina, Malay Peninsula, India).

Here’s another view of the same bird, still comfortably resting on the cliff edge:

At first I wondered if the bird was sitting on a nest. But then it stood up when a friend arrived to share the view, and there’s no nest in sight:

What can they see from their perch? Here’s their view of Long Reef, with two people walking on the rocks far below:

These little mynas are quite chatty and can make a wide variety of sounds. In this video of a group of birds on the same Dee Why Headland on the same day, you hear just some of the noises they make:

Common name: Common Myna, or Indian Myna

Scientific name: Acridotheres tristris

Approximate length: 25 cm

Date spotted: 29 December 2018 (Summer)

Location: Long Reef Headland, Dee Why, New South Wales, Australia: 33°44’30.6″S 151°19’04.2″E

Ninja wattlebird – now you see it now you don’t

Spot the bird:

It’s a common sight to see a Little Wattlebird on a banksia flower, digging its beak between the florets to find the nectar. I hadn’t realised until now, though, how perfectly camouflaged the bird is on the grey branches of a mature banksia, particularly when surrounded by dead flowerheads.

Here’s a closeup pic of the bird, looking supremely confident though, dare I say it, not very well groomed:

These are the flowers of the Banksia Serrata tree where I saw the bird:

The wattlebird later moved to a bare branch to do a bit of grooming. Caught in dishevelled silhouette against the morning sun:

Common name: Little Wattlebird

Scientific name: Anthochaera chrysoptera

Approximate length: 30 cm

Date spotted: 26 December 2018 (Summer)

Location: Manly Dam National Park, New South Wales, Australia: 33°46’15.4″S 151°14’45.0″E

Cormorants at Long Reef Headland, Dee Why

This morning I took a walk along Dee Why Headland and followed the path down onto Long Reef. Far in the distance, perched on the rocks at the sea’s edge, was an assortment of cormorants.

Pretty cool: when I dropped the pin on Google Maps to mark the spot, the label came up as “Near South Pacific Ocean”!

Great Cormorants

First there were these four birds, which I think are Great Cormorants. The air was full of spray and the early morning sun was low in the sky, so it’s hard to be sure. One is holding its wings up in typical cormorant style. The birds seem to be just about entirely black, with yellow or white around the beak. At the end of the video, I zoom back out so that you can see just how far away the birds were. On cue, a yacht hoves into view too.

Common name: Great Cormorant

Scientific name: Phalacrocorax carbo

Approximate length: 85 cm; wing span 1.5 m

Date spotted: 29 December 2018 (Summer)

Location: Long Reef Headland, Dee Why, New South Wales, Australia: 33°44’30.6″S 151°19’04.2″E

Little Pied Cormorant

Next I saw this Little Pied Cormorant, looking a bit ruffled:

Here’s a video of the Little Pied Cormorant enjoying the waves and the sticky breeze:

Common name: Little Pied Cormorant

Scientific name: Phalacrocorax melanoleucos

Approximate length: 60 cm

Date spotted: 29 December 2018 (Summer)

Location: Long Reef Headland, Dee Why, New South Wales, Australia: 33°44’30.6″S 151°19’04.2″E

Thunderstorm rolling over the valley

A few evenings ago, a storm rolled over the valley below our house and across Curl Curl beach in the far distance. I managed to film some of the action. It’s strangely soothing to watch the clouds, hear the thunder, and see the lightning brighten the sky. The clicks you hear are the first drops of rain hitting the roof.

Kookaburras call to herald the start of the storm:

Misty coot

Mist over Manly Dam. You can’t really see the coot. But then, you don’t really need to see it. It’s just there, as coots are.

Common name: Eurasian Coot

Scientific name: Fulica atra

Approximate length: 35 cm

Date spotted: 26 December 2018 (Summer)

Location: Manly Dam Reserve, New South Wales, Australia: 33°46’27.7″S 151°15’05.9″E

Baby Kookaburra practising its call

This youngster looks too bashful to burst into the full-throated call of an adult Kookaburra. Perhaps it hasn’t developed the vocal power yet. Or perhaps it’s daunted by those pesky cicadas!

Male Koel Cuckoo in shot at last

Recently I’ve managed to snap a few shots of female Eastern Koels, also called Common Koels or Koel Cuckoos. Now a male has come into my sights:

While the female is rather pretty, with shades of cream and brown overlaid with stylish spots, the male is primarily black. In fact, this photo shows more variation in colour than usual, because of the soft morning light.

If you’d like to see some shots of the females, or hear some of the cuckoos’ calls, take a look at this list of posts.

Common name: Common Koel or Eastern Koel

Scientific name: Eudynamys scolopacea

Approximate length: 45 cm

Date spotted: 28 December 2018 (Summer)

Location: Allambie Heights, New South Wales, Australia

Magpie song with a touch of Star Wars

A sociable magpie dropped by the other day to try out its song on me. I think the bird is still a youngster, as its eyes are not yet the bright red of an adult. The magpie let me get up to about two metres away, and still happily continued its song. I didn’t try to get any closer. After all, it’s a wild bird and entitled to its space. Plus, magpies are known to fly off the handle at times.

As well as the usual magpie warbles, this bird adds a few extra whistles and chirps. Sometimes it sounds as if it’s been listening to a Star Wars sound track!

Common name: Australian Magpie

Scientific name: Gymnorhina tibicen

Approximate length: 40 cm

Date spotted: 24 December 2018 (Summer)

Location: Allambie Heights, NSW, Australia (near Sydney

Kookaburras and leafhopper egg sack

A few weeks ago I wrote about the true bug that laid a clutch of eggs on my wall, and the hatching of those eggs into cute little leafhoppers. Yesterday I took a picture of two kookaburras high in a tree, because I thought the angle was cute:

As well as the underside of the kookaburra beaks and their beady eyes, looking more closely, you can see…

Yes, an egg sack that looks just like the one on my wall. The two kookaburras and the egg sack were high, high up in a gum tree. Someday soon, tiny little critturs like these will hatch. I bet the mother bug wasn’t aware that two such fearsome beaks would be in close proximity to her brood!

Common name: Laughing Kookaburra

Scientific name: Dacelo novaeguineae

Approximate length: 47 cm

Date spotted: 24 December 2018 (Summer)

Location: Manly Dam Nature Reserve, New South Wales, Australia: 33°46’56.2″S 151°15’22.5″E

Leafhopper bugs hatched from egg sack

At the beginning of this month I posted some pictures of a pretty little bug moving around a big white patch of gunk on my outside wall. The bug turned out to be a “true bug” in the Hemiptera order, also called leafhoppers or planthoppers. Specifically, I thought it may be a Eucalypt Planthopper (Eurybrachyidae).

At the time I wrote that post, I wasn’t sure that the big white patch of gunk was related to the bug, though it seemed likely. Now it’s certain. Three weeks after the first sighting, this happened:

Tens of tiny little bugs hatched from the egg sack. Each bug is minute – just a millimetre or two long. Too small for me to see properly with the naked eye. The above image is zoomed in.

I saw the bug creating the egg sack on 24 November, and the little creatures hatched around three weeks later, on 16 December.

Here’s a sideways view, so that you can see the forest of tiny antennae:

Now they’ve all dispersed, leaving us with just a white patch on the wall. I’ve seen similar patches before, and wondered where they came from. Now I know!