Blog Archives

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

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!

Big lizard climbing tree near Sydney

The things birds in Australia have to put up with! This is a Water Dragon up a tree, probably looking for a nice breakfast of eggs:

Water Dragon climbing a tree

What a lovely long tail it has! Perfect for keeping a grip on a tree branch. Australian Water Dragons reach 90 cm in length. They have large heads which they can lift up quite high above the level of their bodies. Their scientific name isItellagama lesueurii lesueurii.

Growing up – juvenile Powerful Owls near Sydney

Two months ago I spotted a family of Powerful Owls in Manly Dam National Park, near Sydney. Last week I spotted two of them again in the same area of bush. Given their fluffiness, I think these are the two juveniles of the family.

This is what the scene looked like without my camera’s powerful 60x zoom. If you look carefully, you can just make out the two owl-shaped dots in the centre of the picture:

Below is a closer view. It seems to be usual for one bird to be awake and vigilant while the other sleeps:

In this video, the awake owl blinks a slow, wise blink and wiggles its head from side to side in that endearing yet terrifying manner they have. A little later, the call of a passing Currawong attracts the owl’s attention:

Common name: Powerful Owl

Scientific name: Ninox strenua

Approximate length: 65 cm

Date spotted: 25 November 2018 (Spring)

Location: Manly Dam Reserve, New South Wales, Australia

Red Wattlebird eating lerp

Red Wattlebirds are large honeyeaters, often seen diving through the foliage and chasing other birds away from a prized source of sugar. This one was making a lot of noise crashing through the branches. Probably on a sugar high. I think the white fuzzy stuff attached to its beak is lerp – crystalised honeydew exuded by bugs as a protective covering. A sweet treat for a bird. Red Wattlebirds get their name from the red wattles hanging below each cheek.

Common name: Red Wattlebird

Scientific name: Anthochaera carunculata

Approximate length: 35 cm

Date spotted: 11 November 2018 (Spring)

Location: Manly Dam National Park, New South Wales, Australia: 33°46’36.6″S 151°15’17.9″E

Female Koel cuckoo

Koel cuckoos have been swooping and calling around our house the last couple of days. They arrive in this neck of the woods in spring and head off again for northern climes in autumn. While here, they lay eggs in another bird’s nest and leave it up to the host family to feed the youngster. Typical cuckoo.

This is a female Koel cuckoo. They’re impressive to look at, and quite decorative in contrast to the completely-black male of the species.

An earlier post shows a male Koel cuckoo, and you can play the video in that post to hear their call.

Common name: Common Koel or Eastern Koel

Scientific name: Eudynamys scolopacea

Approximate length: 45 cm

Date spotted: 10 November 2018 (spring)

Location: Allambie Heights, NSW, Australia

Eastern Rosella calling and dancing

This has turned out to be parrot weekend in our garden. Yesterday four black cockatoos dropped by. Today it was two Eastern Rosellas. This is the first time I’ve managed to get a photo of one of these lovely birds. Its characteristic call drew me to the window. There it was on our Scribbly Gum tree right outside the window, dancing and chattering to its mate:

Knowing that these birds usually go about in pairs, I looked for the other one but didn’t see it until they both flew away, several minutes later. (The mate was higher up in the tree, hidden by the foliage.)

At 30 cm in length, Eastern Rosellas are slightly smaller than the Crimson Rosellas that we see more often in our area. This still shot shows the bird in all its beauty:

Common name: Eastern Rosella

Scientific name: Platycercus eximius

Approximate length: 30 cm

Date spotted: 21 October 2018 (Spring)

Location: Allambie Heights, NSW, Australia