DAY THIRTY-TWO - the one with all the birds
Yesterday I had discovered that the Oxley Creek Common was not only an excellent birding spot but that the morning I was there was, apparently, "pretty quiet". As I had seen 45 species that morning I wanted to go back and see what it was like if I got there early enough for it not to be "quiet". Taking the earliest train I could, I arrived at the reserve at 5.30am, just half an hour after sunrise and two hours earlier yesterday's arrival time. This did indeed seem to make a big difference. Not only did were there a lot more birds in general but the number of species I saw was also considerably higher, with sixty species ticked off by the time I left. The day as a whole was the most successful of the trip in terms of numbers, with 72 bird species seen in total.
There was a bit of a surprise right at the start with a young Brushtail Possum sitting by the "red barn". I have no idea what it was doing out in the daytime, and its presence was certainly not appreciated by the Grey Butcherbird who kept dive-bombing it. Just afterwards I came across another nocturnal animal, although this one was a Tawny Frogmouth sitting in a tree pretending to be a branch as they are wont to do.
Common Brushtail Possum
Tawny Frogmouth
The first half of the track was even better than yesterday, with Brown Quail being vastly more apparent than the day before and there just being more of all the birds in general. I saw a number of cisticolas which I had missed the previous day. Other birds which I hadn't seen yesterday and which were new for the trip-list included Fan-tailed Cuckoo, Olive-backed Oriole, White-winged Triller and Golden Whistler. The Pallid Cuckoo was still in the same area as before. In the weedy lagoon I spotted a lifer Latham's Snipe (apparently commonly seen here) and the larger lagoon had Australian Pelicans, Darters and Great Cormorants amongst the usual ducks. I was really pleased with how the morning turned out.
Brown Quail
Golden-headed Cisticola
Despite not having seen much at the Sherwood Arboretum when I'd been on one of the previous afternoons, I had been going to return there briefly today anyway; and then I was going to go to Mt. Coot-Tha where there was supposed to be a chance of seeing Powerful Owls roosting. But while at Oxley Creek Common I had a chat to two ladies who were wandering through, and they mentioned that Crested Bellbirds were common at a place called Enoggera Reservoir. I have never seen Crested Bellbirds - and I wanted to. Should I go for a slim chance of Powerful Owls at Mt. Coot-Tha, or a high chance of Crested Bellbirds at the Enoggera Reservoir? I went with the bellbirds. Now, the Slater field-guide cuts out the eastern coast on their distribution map for the Crested Bellbird but their maps can't always be trusted (cough... Brown Honeyeater!) and the two ladies were very specific on these being
Crested Bellbirds and how they were common at the lake. I decided to skip the arboretum and head directly back to the city so that I could find out how to get to this lake.
The info centre in the city was most helpful - it turns out that the Enoggera Reservoir is well-known and not some obscure location as I had thought it might be, and there is a bus (the #385) which goes straight there from town. The lake is quite large with a track running right around it through forest. I think it would likely be an exceptionally good birding spot in the early morning - probably not as good as Oxley Creek Common because there is less of a range in the habitats, but there would be a lot of proper forest birds there. Because I was there in the middle of the day I only saw a few birds, the best of which were Large-billed Scrubwren and White-throated Treecreeper. An extra bird bonus were the Comb-crested Jacanas strutting around on the rafts of floating vegetation.
And what of the Crested Bellbirds? Well, soon after I arrived I started hearing the distinctive metallic chiming of Bell Miners and knew immediately that there had been a fatal error in the ladies' use of bird names...
Still, it wasn't a waste of time going there because I did see some other nice birds, even if nothing "new", and I happily discovered that this was where the Walkabout Creek Discovery Centre was located. I wrote a little review and species list here:
Walkabout Creek species list, October 2019 [Walkabout Creek Discovery Centre]
Also extremely noteworthy was a lifer snake! While walking back to the bus stop I came across this beautiful Carpet Python crossing the path.
My day was not yet done. I had failed to find a Greater Glider the night before last and this was my last chance. The writer of the trip report I mentioned in that post had found the gliders easily, or so they had implied. And thus I found myself back on a train to Cleveland. Dusk had already fallen when I got to the Greater Glider Conservation Area. On the walk to the reserve I saw Black Flying Foxes flapping overhead, with enough light still to see which species they were (on my previous visit I had only seen them after dark).
In contrast to the last visit, on this evening I saw three Common Ringtail Possums (none last time), and it wasn't until I was three-quarters of the way around the loop track that I encountered the first Common Brushtail and I only saw one other after that. Also there were Cane Toads all around the track whereas last time I hadn't seen any at all (their absence was something I had specifically noticed because they had been so common at the Deagon Wetlands in Sandgate).
Finally, when my time was almost up, I got some eye-shine in the top of a massive eucalyptus and saw a huge possum staring down at me. That had to be a Greater Glider just from size alone. I hi-fived myself mentally (not physically because that would be weird). The possum didn't move. I kept looking at it. Greater Glider - had to be. Honestly I wasn't convinced. I moved around the tree, trying to get a side view without the branch it was on obscuring the body. No good. I went back to the front. It just looked wrong. The ears were wrong. I could see the end of the tail poking out behind the branch, and it looked wrong. But it was far too big to be a Brushtail Possum. I spent twenty minutes staring at the damn thing through binoculars but because it wasn't moving the view wasn't changing anything. I was pretty sure it had to be a Brushtail, but it was a monster. Eventually I had to leave because if I missed the bus there was no way to get back to the city after the last train. Final assessment: not a Greater Glider. Or if it was I don't want to know. I checked some photos online afterwards to reassure myself and I'm positive it had to have been a ginormous Brushtail Possum.
I made it back to the bus stop with ten minutes to spare.
The reserve does seem like it would be a "reliable" place to try and see Greater Gliders. If I were to go back to Brisbane (which is likely if Air Asia retains the Bangkok-to-Brisbane route) then I will go back there. In fact I'd see if I could find a hostel in Cleveland or closer, so that I could stay in the reserve for longer without having to worry about missing the last train back to the city.
Animals seen today:
BIRDS:
Rainbow Lorikeet
Trichoglossus haematodus
Spotted Dove
Streptopelia chinensis
Australian Magpie
Gymnorhina tibicen
Magpie-Lark
Grallina cyanoleuca
Australian White Ibis
Threskiornis molucca
Cattle Egret
Bubulcus ibis
Greater Sulphur-crested Cockatoo
Cacatua galerita
Australian Brush Turkey
Alectura lathami
Masked Lapwing
Vanellus miles
Noisy Miner
Manorina melanocephala
Australian Wood Duck
Chenonetta jubata
Tawny Frogmouth
Podargus strigoides
Grey Butcherbird
Craciticus torquatus
Spangled Drongo
Dicrurus bracteatus
Tawny Grassbird
Cincloramphus timoriensis
Brown Honeyeater
Lichmera indistincta
Superb Blue Wren
Malurus cyaneus
Brown Quail
Coturnix ypsilophora
Pied Currawong
Strepera graculina
Fan-tailed Cuckoo
Cacomantis flabelliformis
Olive-backed Oriole
Oriolus sagittatus
Sacred Kingfisher
Todiramphus sanctus
Golden-headed Cisticola
Cisticola exilis
Red-browed Firetail
Neochmia temporalis
Bar-shouldered Dove
Geopelia humeralis
Straw-necked Ibis
Threskiornis spinicollis
Pallid Cuckoo
Cacomantis pallidus
Black-faced Cuckoo-Shrike
Coracina novaehollandiae
Willy Wagtail
Rhipidura leucophrys
Lewin's Honeyeater
Meliphaga lewinii
Australian Raven
Corvus coronoides
Galah
Cacatua roseicapilla
Intermediate Egret
Egretta intermedia
Red-backed Fairy Wren
Malurus melanocephalus
Double-barred (Owl) Finch
Taeniopygia bichenovii
Blue-faced Honeyeater
Entomyzon cyanotis
Welcome Swallow
Hirundo neoxena
White-headed (Pied) Stilt
Himantopus leucocephalus
Pacific Black Duck
Anas superciliosa
Fairy Martin
Hirundo ariel
Black-fronted Dotterel
Elseyornis melanops
Glossy Ibis
Plegadis falcinellus
Latham's Snipe Gallinago hardwickii
White-faced Heron
Ardea novaehollandiae
Australian Pelican
Pelecanus conspicillatus
Australian Darter
Anhinga novaehollandiae
Great Cormorant
Phalacrocorax carbo
Little Black Shag
Phalacrocorax sulcirostris
Dusky Moorhen
Gallinula tenebrosa
White-eyed Duck
Aythya australis
Grey Teal
Anas gracilis
Australian Black-shouldered Kite
Elanus axillaris
Eastern Whipbird
Psophodes olivaceus
White-winged Triller
Lalage tricolor
Grey Shrike-Thrush
Colluricincla harmonica
Golden Whistler
Pachycephala pectoralis
Common Kookaburra
Dacelo novaeguineae
Common Mynah
Acridotheres tristis
Australasian Pipit
Anthus novaeseelandiae
Crested Pigeon
Ocyphaps lophotes
Australian King Parrot
Alisterus scapularis
Common Coot
Fulica atra
Australian Little Grebe
Tachybaptus novaehollandiae
Comb-crested Jacana
Jacana gallinacea
Brown Thornbill
Acanthiza pusilla
White-browed Scrubwren
Sericornis frontalis
Large-billed Scrubwren
Sericornis magnirostris
Bell Miner
Manorina melanophrys
White-throated Treecreeper
Cormobates leucophaeus
Brown Falcon
Falco berigora
Torresian Crow
Corvus orru
Noisy Friarbird
Philemon corniculatus
MAMMALS:
Common Brush-tailed Possum
Trichosurus vulpecula
Black Flying Fox
Pteropus alecto
Red-necked Wallaby
Macropus rufogriseus
Common Ringtail Possum
Pseudocheirus peregrinus
REPTILES:
Eastern Water Dragon
Physignathus lesueurii
Carpet Python Morelia spilota
AMPHIBIANS:
Cane Toad
Rhinella marinus