Blog Archives

Blue Laughing Kookaburra at The Bluff above Bantry Bay

Today I hiked from Seaforth Oval to Natural Bridge. Phew! Almost 12,000 steps, 7.7 km, and three climbs down into the valley and back up again! It’s a good walk with lovely views of Bantry Bay, which is one of the inlets of Sydney Harbour.

Close to a lookout point called The Bluff was this fine-looking Laughing Kookaburra. It has a lot more blue in its feathers than most kookaburras that I’ve seen. Perhaps it’s clothed in its spring finery.

This is the view of Bantry Bay from The Bluff Lookout:

Common name: Laughing Kookaburra

Scientific name: Dacelo novaeguineae

Approximate length: 47 cm

Date spotted: 31 August 2020 (Late winter)

Location: Bluff Trail, Killarney Heights, New South Wales, Australia: 33°46’00.3″S 151°13’42.3″E

Kookaburra standoff with Magpie

In this video, a Laughing Kookaburra stands guard against an Australian Magpie. The kookaburra has a stash of some kind of food on the rock behind it. Before I started filming, the magpie tried a few times to approach the food. Now, as seen in the video, the magpie seems more or less resigned to just giving the kookaburra a piece of its mind. At the end of the video, an Australian Miner drops in too. I wish I knew what the Magpie was saying!

This is the kookaburra after it finished its meal and flew to a nearby branch:

Kookaburra on a gum tree

Common name: Laughing Kookaburra

Scientific name: Dacelo novaeguineae

Approximate length: 47 cm

Date spotted: 28 March 2020 (late summer)

Location: Near Sydney, Australia

The magpie took refuge on our roof:

Magpie on roof

Common name: Australian Magpie

Scientific name: Gymnorhina tibicen

Approximate length: 40 cm

Date spotted: 28 March 2020 (late summer)

Location: Near Sydney, Australia

I didn’t get a shot of the Australian Miner. It’s probably one of the birds guarding the nest of baby miners which I’ve blogged about recently.

Wet Kookaburra

It’s been raining quite a bit recently, which is a good thing for the environment and our water supply. Sometimes, though, I do feel sorry for the wildlife caught out in the deluge.

Crikey, that was a downpour, mate!

A view of the bird’s head from behind isn’t any prettier:

Turn me upside down, and I’d do a good job of mopping your floor.

You know that feeling, when your feathers just feel like old, wet fur…

I feel like I’ve been hung out to dry:

Common name: Laughing Kookaburra

Scientific name: Dacelo novaeguineae

Approximate length: 47 cm

Date spotted: 27 August 2019 (Late winter)

Location: Manly Dam National Park, New South Wales, Australia: 33°46’54.6″S 151°15’09.4″E

Kookaburra in a mess after hollowing out termite nest

“Don’t look at me! I’m a mess.

Been hard at work hollowing out a termite nest.”

That’s what this kookaburra seems to be saying:

“What, you don’t think termite gunge is the right look for me?”

“OK then. Here’s what I’ve been doing for the last half hour:”

“That’s a big termite nest, high up in a tall tree.

And soon it’ll be a home for my family and me:”

Common name: Laughing Kookaburra

Scientific name: Dacelo novaeguineae

Approximate length: 47 cm

Date spotted: 28 July 2019 (Winter)

Location: Manly Dam National Park, New South Wales, Australia: 33°46’48.1″S 151°14’52.5″E

Kookaburra baby cackling and feeding

The kookaburras around our neighbourhood are very noisy at the moment. A couple of juveniles drop by regularly to practise their cackling skills. They’re cute and funny.

In this video, you can see one youngster crooning to himself, and another behind the branches. In the background, other birds chime in to show him how it’s done. A parent comes by a couple of times too, to feed the ever-demanding little one.

Common name: Laughing Kookaburra

Scientific name: Dacelo novaeguineae

Approximate length: 47 cm

Date spotted: 31 December 2016

Season: Summer

Location: Allambie Heights, New South Wales, Australia

Kookaburras cranking up for a cackle

You’ve probably heard kookaburras in full voice, cackling and hooting raucously. I think the sound they make when they’re preparing for a full-voice yodel is funny and cute. It happens in particular when there’s a group of birds. They chunter at each other, perhaps in warning or perhaps companionably. They sound a bit like rusty saws in a dusty attic.

These two were in a tree high above my lounge window:

I encountered this disreputable, slightly dangerous looking character deep in the bush:

Common name: Laughing Kookaburra

Scientific name: Dacelo novaeguineae

Approximate length: 47 cm

Date spotted (second video): 26 December 2016

Season: Summer

Location (second video): Manly Dam Nature Reserve, New South Wales, Australia: 33°46’50.4″S 151°14’59.6″E