CONTACT:
28/12/2023
EASTERN KOEL
02/12/2023
NEW HOLLAND HONEYEATER
New Holland HoneyeatersPhylidony nigra
beautiful little birds are very visible during the Spring as they feed on the native flowers in gardens and roadsides.
They are a fast and aggressive they fly between trees and shrubs, quick to chase bigger and more powerful birds from what they see as their territory.
They seem to have become much more common in the Kilmore area over the last few years. I can scarcely remember seeing them much until the last ten years.
Perhaps it is the native plants that people are placing in their gardens that provide a more palatable and attractive food
A much better taste for them than roses and camellias source.Despite the name Honeyeater, these birds are also often seen feeding on insects which they take from the air with acrobatic skill.
11/11/2023
PALLID CUCKOO
Palli Cuckoo Cuculus pallidus
Palli Cuckoo Cuculus pallidus
20/09/2023
Fan-tailed Cuckoo
Fan-tailed Cuckoo Cacomantis flabelliformis
Of course cuckoos are well known for their habit laying their eggs in the nests of other birds, usually much smaller birds. They will push the eggs of the resident birds from the nest and then lay their own egg to replace those they have ousted. Generally cuckoos lay a single egg in a nest, but can lay multiple eggs across multiple nests.
15/09/2023
NEW HOLLAND HONEYEATER
New Holland Honeyeater Phylidonyris novaechollandiae
23/08/2023
PARDALOTE STRIATED
Striated Pardalote Pardalotus striatus
One can always find pardalotes, no matter what the weather be. nor the time of year, at Kilmore East.
There is a colony which lives in, under and around a road bridge between Dry Creek Road and the Wandong-Broadford Road. Under this bridge are mud fairy martin nests and this is where the pardalotes lay their eggs and bring up their young.
At this time they re nesting. Both male and female appear to be feeding the young. One or other will approach the nest, landing on a tree branch five to ten metres out from the nest and chirp. Perhaps this is to make sure everything is clear, perhaps it is an attempt to make the nest site a little obscure for any watcher, or perhaps it is just a way of letting the mate know they are on the way.
Whilst pardalotes are known for living in holes in the banks of creeks, I have only ever seen these in and around the martin nests. No martins in these nests, although they are about the area. Have the pardalotes dislocated the martins? I have no idea where the martins nest now.
At other times of the year the birds appear to be living in the scrubby growth along the creek. As soon as one approaches the site, the birds can be heard chirruping to each other. They are not timid at all about having someone with a camera, standing within a short distance, watching what they are dong. They are often sitting their pairs, often in groups of ten or a dozen.
18/08/2023
BLUE-FACED HONEYEATER
Blue-faced Honeyeater Entomyzon cyanotis
14/08/2023
LITTLE BROWN BIRDS
Buff rumpedThornbills Acanthiza reguloides
They can be found, hunting amongst the foliage of small trees and shrubs for small insects making much noise as they go, Up and down from scub to the ground, under logs and amongst the grasses and moss, all the while calling to each other..
Lovely things, little brown birds.
10/08/2023
WINTER IN KILMORE
DARTER Anhinga melanogaster
When first seen, this bird was moving through the water. All that could be seen was the long, snake-like head, the body almost totally submerged. A very strange, smaller version of the Loch Ness Monster moving across the water.
I have seen the darters in other places but not often on the Kilmore reservoir. Here we see plenty of cormorants, black and pied, but rarely the darter
This day the lone birdwas sunning itself, drying its wings, on the branches of a tree which had fallen into the water.