Darwin: Lee Point Dam
One of the birds I hadn’t seen at Pine Creek a few weeks back was the Gouldian Finch. I had been told by someone I met that Wyndham in WA was a guaranteed place to see them but it’s not possible to get there without a car. When I was coming to Darwin I googled if there was anywhere in Darwin where they are seen and Lee Point Dam came up.
It’s not a guaranteed site by any means. Gouldians were first seen in the surrounding area in 2019 and in 2022 there were as many as 150 being seen at the site. In the following years the numbers have been minimal (as in, individual birds being seen). As of right now the last record on eBird was in August 2025. So the chances of seeing a Gouldian Finch here are really small but it’s still worth a shot, and obviously there are other birds to see here even if there are no Gouldians about.
Getting to Lee Point Dam requires two buses. From where I am I took the #4 to the Casuarina interchange and then the #24 to Fuhrmann Street from where it is a short walk. Today was a Sunday, but even on weekdays the #24 runs less than hourly so you need to get your times right or you’ll be in for a long wait.
I’ve mentioned before how all the local buses in the Northern Territory are free at the moment. This saves money on getting around, but it’s a little disconcerting how all the buses are plastered with notices about respecting the driver and other passengers, with anti-violence messages, and with phone numbers for the police. I’ve never seen anything like it on buses before. I haven’t seen any issues myself – maybe it is more of a night-time thing. When I got to the Casuarina interchange I saw there were notices that this interchange and the one in the main city area were being permanently closed on October 27 (the next day) due to “anti-social behaviour”, and buses would be moved to street-side stops instead.
The dam (more of a lagoon or waterhole) and the whole surrounding area is at the centre of the Save Lee Point campaign, because the woodlands here are currently being destroyed to make way for housing projects. Most of the wooded areas are blocked by fencing and “no trespassing” signs, on which the campaigners have hung their own signs emblazoned with Gouldian Finches saying things like “We need a home too”.
When I reached the dirt road which runs beside the Lee Point Village Resort to the dam I saw a big official sign saying entry was forbidden. There were two birders walking out right then, so I asked them what the deal was and they said to ignore it. Done, and done.
This is a great little site. You’ve basically got a short entry road and then a small lagoon with a track encircling it entirely, it’s all woodland and grassland, and there are birds everywhere. There are other tracks running off as well, and if it hadn’t been so unbearably hot I would have stayed there exploring further for several hours. If this all gets destroyed it would be terrible.
There was another birder couple at the lagoon, and they asked me if I knew what the birds they were looking at were. The birds were zipping back and forth between the trees on both sides of the track. I could see they were honeyeaters but I had to wait for one to pause for more than half a second to see what it was. And what it was, was a Rufous-banded Honeyeater, the honeyeater I had most wanted to see while up here.
The Rufous-banded Honeyeater is largely a New Guinea bird, in Australia being found only at the very top of the Northern Territory and on Cape York Peninsula. I think they now have to be my favourite honeyeater in Australia. I had thought that they were probably going to be one of those birds which you really want to see but then end up only seeing for brief glimpses, but instead they were very common at the dam. I couldn’t manage any photos here, but below is one I took the next day at the Holmes Jungle Nature Reserve where they were also very common.
The trees around the lagoon were good for all sorts of honeyeaters as it turned out. As well as the Rufous-banded Honeyeaters there were White-throated, White-gaped, Bar-breasted and Brown Honeyeaters, Dusky and Red-headed Myzomelas, and Little Friarbirds.
I had seen some Crimson Finches on my way around the lagoon so I asked the other birders if they had already seen them, and they said yes, and just then a bunch of Crimson Finches flew across the track. We started watching them, and trying to get photos, when I noticed some different finches joining in. They were Chestnut-breasted Mannikins, which weren’t a lifer for me but were for the other guys.
Chestnut-breasted Mannikins
Crimson Finch
I spent about two hours here I guess and saw somewhere close to 35 species, none of which were Gouldian Finches. The birders I’d been talking to had headed off soon after seeing the mannikins, and had offered me a lift back to my hotel but I’d only just arrived so I declined, but they had said that anywhere along the Casuarina coast nearby was good birding and on their phone we saw that there was a road through there almost opposite the entry road for the dam.
Even though it was much too hot I was going to have a wander through that area before heading “home”. On the way back to the main road I saw another lifer, with a trio of Lemon-bellied Flycatchers.
Lemon-bellied Flycatchers are classed as Australasian robins now rather than flycatchers - just another one of those quirky Australian things where animals look like totally unrelated animals which confused earlier taxonomists. On eBird they have been rebranded as “Lemon-bellied Flyrobins”, which is an atrocious name. The name flycatcher is given because they catch flies. What does “flyrobin” mean? It’s nonsensical. If they’d called them “flycatcher-robins” sure, maybe. But “flyrobins”?
The side-road from Lee Point Road to the Casuarina coast was blocked by more fencing from Defence Housing, which stretched all the way down Lee Point Road as far as I could tell. I walked along the road for a bit to see if there was another way but it was too hot and I decided to just go catch a bus back to the hotel.
I saw 37 species of birds today:
Little Black Cormorant, Australian Darter, Spur-winged Plover, Bush Stone-Curlew, Silver Gull, Australian White Ibis, Straw-necked Ibis, Black Kite, Whistling Kite, Torresian Imperial Pigeon, Bar-shouldered Dove, Peaceful Dove, Red-tailed Black Cockatoo, Galah, Greater Sulphur-crested Cockatoo, Red-collared Lorikeet, Forest Kingfisher, White-bellied Cuckoo-Shrike, Tawny Grassbird, Northern Fantail, Lemon-bellied Flycatcher, Paperbark Flycatcher, Magpie-Lark, White-throated Honeyeater, Rufous-banded Honeyeater, Bar-breasted Honeyeater, White-gaped Honeyeater, Brown Honeyeater, Dusky Myzomela, Red-headed Myzomela, Little Friarbird, Double-barred (Owl) Finch, Crimson Finch, Chestnut-breasted Mannikin, Australian Figbird, Spangled Drongo, Great Bowerbird.
Greater Sulphur-crested Cockatoo. This is the northern subspecies
fitzroyi.