Mt Lewis
This time we didn't have any trees blocking the way so we could drive all the way up to "the clearing". First mammal we found three trees up the road was a Daintree ringtail, so main goal achieved in minutes(Mt Lewis is pretty much the only place to see one.)
We headed further up the road where we saw lots of leaf-tails and melomys as well as 4 green ringtails and the occasional frogs.
We then checked out another side-path but didn't get much (except a sleeping Fantail we had to duck under). We were ready to call it a night when we stumbled upon a pair of Pygmy-possums (my first wild ones) feeding in a tree close to our car
(They did decide that freezing in white light (as they are known to do) is more of an optional thing so we didn't get a photo.)
A very successful night and thanks to Patrick and all the overtime he put in!
Animals seen:
Daintree River Ringtail Possum
Green Ringtail Possum
Northern Leaf-tail Gecko
Fawn-footed Melomys
Green-eyed Treefrog
Northern Barred Frog
Long-tailed Pygmy-possum
Rufous Fantail
unidentified rodents and bats
On the way back to Cairns we saw another Bandicoot and Rat.
Animals seen:
Northern Brown Bandicoot
Giant White-tailed Rat
Next up: Mt Claro
For my next trip coming up this Monday I have planned to go to the following places so far:
Perth Zoo
Armadale Reptile and Wildlife Center
Kanyana WRC
Barna Mia
Dryandra SF
Sugarloaf Rock
Cheynes Beach
Anyone have any advice on other must-see places or can tell me anything about the other zoos in the south-west area?
For my next trip coming up this Monday I have planned to go to the following places so far:
Perth Zoo
Armadale Reptile and Wildlife Center
Kanyana WRC
Barna Mia
Dryandra SF
Sugarloaf Rock
Cheynes Beach
Anyone have any advice on other must-see places or can tell me anything about the other zoos in the south-west area?
Did you not see Quenda last time you were in WA? (I'd need to read back through the other thread). They are really common, even within Perth itself, so if you haven't seen them yet then they will (should!) be easy. Have you seen obesulus Southern Brown Bandicoot in the east?Updated target list:
Marsupials:
Quenda - Barna Mia Nocturnal Wildlife Experience, (?)
Western Barred Bandicoot - Barna Mia Nocturnal Wildlife Experience
I thought the Western Barred Bandicoots were gone from Barna Mia now? I thought that's what @LaughingDove had said on here, but I might be remembering that wrong.
I didn't do the driving so not a 100% sure. But I think we went up Mt Lewis Road and parked at the Blue Finch Site and then went on foot past the gate (road further up is closed during the wet).Where did you enter Mount Lewis from for spotlighting?
There seems to be three obvious options on google maps, the far southern end (Mount Lewis Road - near Julatten), a bit further to the West of that (the road doesn't seem to be named, but where there seems to be various things labelled as Mount Carbine), or from the Mossman side?
I've been to the area, but only for three days (did Cheynes Beach, Perth Zoo and AQWA). This time I'll have a couple days more.I can give a bit of advice for places around the Perth area as I visit every few years to see relatives. I seem to recall that you've visited Perth/the South West before (?) have you been to Caversham Wildlife Park? It's rather good and definitely worth a visit. They've got a number of quite unusual species and it's a nice little place. AQWA is good too.
Nope, no Quenda last time (at least none that I could identify as such), but I wasn't really looking for them back then.Did you not see Quenda last time you were in WA? (I'd need to read back through the other thread). They are really common, even within Perth itself, so if you haven't seen them yet then they will (should!) be easy. Have you seen obesulus Southern Brown Bandicoot in the east?
I've talked to people there and they should still have them although I've been told they are the least easy ones to see.I thought the Western Barred Bandicoots were gone from Barna Mia now? I thought that's what @LaughingDove had said on here, but I might be remembering that wrong.
I've been to the area, but only for three days (did Cheynes Beach, Perth Zoo and AQWA). This time I'll have a couple days more.
Haven't been to Caversham. What unusual species do they have?
Thanks for the advice on Quenda and Sittella.
I've read your trip reports (that's actually why Armadale made it onto my list) but will have to give it a more thorough read again...
Yes, I'd seen that photo but I don't know if it's obesulus or fusciventer. The only zoos which list their animals as anything other than simply "Southern Brown Bandicoot Isoodon obesulus" are Cleland and Softfoot (which both have eastern obesulus). For all the others - west and east - they are unspecified. Googling didn't give me any answers as to which Adelaide holds. It could be assumed that they hold the local one, but that's not a given.Nope, no Quenda last time (at least none that I could identify as such), but I wasn't really looking for them back then.
I have seen SB Bandicoot here (in the east) twice which will come up if I ever finish that other thread.
That is exactly what I was thinking of. I'd seen your photo of the bandicoot and so thought they must have left after you'd been there.When I visited Barna Mia (4 years ago) they did have Western Barred Bandicoots.
When I visited, I was told that Banded Hare-wallabies had left recently, so maybe that's what you're thinking of.
That's fair enough. Adelaide Zoo's sign only said: Southern Brown Bandicoot Isoodon obesulus and I didn't see the ones at Cleland. But I have seen two wild ones so at least those are a sure thing.Yes, I'd seen that photo but I don't know if it's obesulus or fusciventer. The only zoos which list their animals as anything other than simply "Southern Brown Bandicoot Isoodon obesulus" are Cleland and Softfoot (which both have eastern obesulus). For all the others - west and east - they are unspecified. Googling didn't give me any answers as to which Adelaide holds. It could be assumed that they hold the local one, but that's not a given.
Day 1 - Cairns
The first day started a mess and I almost didn't make it onto my flight because the shuttle bus I'd booked myself onto from Ballarat decided to leave early that day, which at 5am doesn't leave you with a lot of options. Luckily there was a train to Southern Cross coming in that I jumped onto after the desk person decided to not give a sh*** and being generally unhelpful and no one answering the phone hotline. So after taking the Skytrain from SC (light traffic jam) I arrived to the Tigerair baggage area just to have them have a problem with their luggage carousel thingy. Of course at security my bag had to be checked three times and I got pulled out of the line for a random explosives check. So after all that I arrived to the terminal with minutes to spare and then was made to pay an extra $50 because my carry-on was 2kg over (nevermind that my other bag was lighter and I could have rearranged stuff but Tiger decided to weigh in front of the gate...).
When we arrived in Cairns it took an hour to get someone on the phone to arrange for my pick-up to the Atlas rental depot. All in all (as you can imagine) I wasn't the happiest camper that day.
Cairns Aquarium
My first stop was the new Cairns Aquarium in the inner city. Cairns is another one of those Aussie-towns that turn out to be smaller than you'd expect them to be, but anyway...
I won't loose to many words on this one as there's already a pretty thorough walk-through by Sunbear12 here and for the species list click here.
Just a couple of impressions:
-You could tell that it was fairly new by how clean and not run-down it was.
-I liked the comparatively large freshwater section and the whole place overall but was missing a bit of a star species and a differentiating factor. Yes, Emerald Monitor and a couple of others I hadn't seen before but overall it just wasn't different enough from other aquariums around the country.
-There was a section about why animals on the reef have certain colours that I thought was a very nice touch.
Animals checked off my list:
Emerald Monitor
Peppermint Stick Insect
Large-toothed Sawfish
a couple of other fish and crabs
Next up: Cairns Wildlife Dome
This one?There's a wildlife park at Bunbury that's been advertising on regional TV. I know nothing about it (unless it's a re-named Peel Zoo), but it might be worth visiting. At the very least ZooChat might get a zoo-review (hint, hint).
There's a wildlife park at Bunbury that's been advertising on regional TV. I know nothing about it (unless it's a re-named Peel Zoo), but it might be worth visiting. At the very least ZooChat might get a zoo-review (hint, hint).
Hix