Chlidonias presents: Bustralia

I have been back in Cairns for four full days. I went to Kuranda on the first day to look for Cassowary (unsuccessfully),

You have mentioned a few places that sound familiar.

1. Mareeba. Isn't this where David Gill later of the South Lakes Park fiasco in the UK had his original infamous Park where (some of) the animals were abandoned when he left? Or is that another Mareeba somewhere else?

2. The Curtain Fig tree- I can remember seeing this (unless there are several!) from my visit to the Cairns area a long while back now- and Kurunda too- we also had no luck with Cassowary.

Are you trying for Cassowary again elsewhere? Really want you to see one.;)
 
The Atherton Tablelands


It was an early start today. There was (supposed to be) a bird-count happening at 7am at Hastie’s Swamp just outside Atherton, which is in the tablelands just west of Cairns. This was the main reason Drew had been going up there. He picked me up at the hostel at 5.15am and we set off.

I had been to Hastie’s Swamp before, when I was last in Cairns (two decades ago now!). Then I had walked from Atherton – it’s only about 5km along the main road out of town – which is what I had been going to do this time as well until meeting Drew.

The GPS in Drew’s car sent us in a silly route but we got to the wetland eventually. There was nobody else there. So much for the bird-count! No matter, we had the hide to ourselves.

Although called a “swamp” it is really a small open lake or lagoon edged with reeds and forest. Two decades ago this was the place to come to see Brolgas. They roosted in the reeds and in the early morning they would be calling and dancing in the fog, and then lift up en masse, sometimes hundreds of them, and fly off to their feeding grounds in the farmland. This was the first place I ever saw Brolgas (and it was on my birthday too!), and two days later I saw my first Sarus Cranes in fields near Yungaburra which is a small town to the east of Atherton.

Now the Brolgas seem to have largely disappeared from here. I just tried to dig up some stats on the numbers of cranes at the site so I could see for myself, but couldn’t really find anything useful showing changes in the population over time – however, what I was told was that while there are some cranes the big numbers are long gone, and same for the roosting areas of the Sarus Cranes.

It is likely connected with changing farming practices on the Tablelands. Corn and peanuts used to be the main crops on the Tablelands, and the cranes fed on the leftovers in the fields. Now a lot of those have been replaced with fields of sugarcane which the cranes can’t use. Apparently sugarcane was never a big crop up here because the season wasn’t long enough before the rains came (it couldn’t be harvested in time), but now the dry season lasts longer so the cane can be grown better and harvested later.

Absent the Brolgas, we still saw 27 species from the hide including Red-browed Finches (which are very common birds down the east coast, but the first ones I’ve seen on this trip).

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The birds were mostly all common species, with lots of ducks (all Black Ducks and Grey Teal, other than a couple of Wandering Whistling Ducks and some White-eyed Ducks) and various wadery things like Purple Swamphens, Dusky Moorhens, Great and Little Egrets, Royal Spoonbills, Pied Stilts and Comb-crested Jacanas. I saw a Banded Rail briefly on the far shore as well. The light wasn’t very good but I managed some photos of the closer birds.

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These are Comb-crested Jacanas


With nothing very interesting here we hopped back in the car and set off for Mt Hypipamee, which is a higher altitude forest known in particular (amongst birders) for Golden Bowerbird. This site is not very far from Atherton but you need a car to get there because “not very far” is still too far for walking. From Atherton it is 25km by road, and from Yungaburra it is 29km. This would almost certainly be my only chance to get here.

There were lots of birds right at the parking area. Victoria’s Riflebird, Yellow-throated Scrubwren, Spectacled Monarch, and Pale-Yellow and Grey-headed Robins were all seen right here, and there was a cacophony of unseen birds in the trees all around.

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Pale-Yellow Robin


From the parking area there is a short trail which leads to a viewing platform above the Hypipamee crater (which looks more like a water-filled sinkhole), and then there is a longer loop trail back to the car park. Drew said that in his experience the most birds are seen just on the trail to the crater, and not much on the other trail.

Just as we started along this trail we met two American birders coming out and stopped to exchange information, as good birders tend to do. They had seen a Blue-faced Parrotfinch earlier in the morning, in the grasses along the trail by the viewing platform. This was good news for Drew because this was the bird he was actually looking for, and even better news for me because Blue-faced Parrotfinches are generally found in more distant places which I wouldn’t be able to reach. Whether it would still be around was another matter.

Continuing on our way, I spotted a treecreeper creeping its way up a tree. There are two species recorded here, the White-throated Treecreeper and the Brown Treecreeper. We got good views of it but were confused as to what it was. It clearly wasn’t a White-throated Treecreeper but it was way too dark to be a Brown Treecreeper, and in any case the field guide said that species was found in dry forest. Then Drew dragged forth a distant memory that the subspecies of Brown Treecreeper found in the Far North (melanotus) is a very distinctive dark form which lives in wet forest and bears the common name of Black Treecreeper (not to be confused with the Black-tailed Treecreeper which is a totally different treecreeper again). So this was a lifer for me – although I’m still going to have to try and find the more regular Brown Treecreeper further south just in case they split melanotus as a full species in the future!

At the viewing platform we saw the grassy area where the parrotfinch had been seen. It was just a short stretch of grass, maybe twenty or thirty metres along the side of the trail before the trees got too thick and the grass disappeared. We walked very slowly up and down here a few times. Maybe the finch was down in the grass, maybe it had gone further down the slope out of sight – maybe it had left entirely.

After a bit we took a position at each end of this section of track so we could watch for any movement over a wider area. We probably spent close to an hour here – Drew really wanted this bird! In the meantime I saw a male Golden Whistler, a Shining Bronze Cuckoo, a Grey Fantail, a male Mistletoebird, and a White-throated Treecreeper of which I got a photo. It’s not a very good shot – the bird was moving constantly and it was quite dark under the trees – but look at those huge talons!

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White-throated Treecreeper


In the end we decided to move on, as the parrotfinch clearly had also done. Some you win and some you lose.

When you’re giving up on a bird you always feel like maybe it will just suddenly appear as you’re leaving. I glanced down from the steps leading onto the viewing platform. Oh, there was the parrotfinch!!

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This was my fifth species of parrotfinch and Drew’s first one. It was remarkably relaxed, just feeding amongst the grasses unobtrusively. Basically the kind of bird which it would be very easy to walk right past if you weren’t actively looking for it. I tried for some photos but I didn’t think any of them would turn out, so gave up on that and just watched it through my binoculars. I was surprised that some of the shots weren’t that bad. They’re not great, but with some cropping and sharpening of the image the one above is “okay” at least. It’s always nice to have some proof as well!


Back at the parking area we walked along the entrance road for a little distance in the hope of seeing a Cassowary. It was pretty hot and while there was still quite a bit of bird-song coming down from the treetops there weren’t many birds being visible.

As we walked back to the car Drew was saying to keep an eye out for any narrow foot-tracks leading off the road because they would probably be leading to Golden Bowerbird bowers. As he was saying this, I saw a track. In we went, and quickly found an old bower and then a second one. I presumed there must be a male still living around the area somewhere. I’d like to say that as we left he came out and we saw him, but unfortunately that did not happen. He was still here though, because two days later I met a birder in Atherton who had just seen him that day on that track.


We returned to Atherton for lunch, buying some pies at the Atherton Bakehouse which I highly recommend – although today was a Friday and, as I found out when staying in Atherton for the next three nights, it is closed on weekends!

We were going to eat our pies at Platypus Park on the edge of Atherton, but accidentally drove right past it (the sign is not obvious) and instead just went back to the hide at Hastie’s Swamp.

There were a number of new birds for the day’s list here, including a huge flock of Magpie Geese which weren’t here in the morning, some pelicans, an Eastern Yellow Robin (nesting near the hide), and several birds of prey – Black Kites, Whistling Kites, a White-bellied Sea Eagle, and a Nankeen Kestrel. A lady in the hide showed us Nankeen Night Herons roosting in a nearby tree. The American couple from Mt Hypipamee (the ones who had let us know about the Blue-faced Parrotfinch) also turned up and I pointed out the White-eyed Ducks which they had been looking for.


The last place we went today was a lake outside Mareeba, which is a town just north of Atherton. On Google it’s called Quaids Dam. Drew had said that between 50 and 150 Green Pigmy Geese had been reported here, and was talking about how a wetland area on the south side of the lake right next to the road was always full of pigmy geese and other water birds whenever he went there in the past. I couldn’t help but think that he probably hadn’t been there at this time of year but didn’t say anything. When we got to that place it was, as I had suspected would be the case, dry land and there were no birds.

Further up the road at a small memorial marker where the lake was viewable, there was a very wide expanse of dry mud before the current lake shore, and there was a fence as well. Clouds of dust were sweeping across the mudflat, even spinning in circles in mini tornadoes. Drew got his scope out of the car. Some of the larger birds could be identified – Black-necked Stork, Black Swans and Brolgas - but with the heat haze and distance everything else were just fuzzy black blobs. There is no way it would have been possible to get identifiable views of pigmy geese from here, and I guess anyone claiming them was a local who was just identifying ducks based on “general impressions of size and shape”.



And that was the day. Drew dropped me at my hotel in Atherton and returned to Cairns. I saw 67 species of birds today, of which two were lifers (Brown Treecreeper and Blue-faced Parrotfinch) and 13 were year-birds. The most annoying miss was the Golden Bowerbird because Mt Hypipamee is, I think, the only likely place to see it.


Australian Little Grebe, Australian Brush Turkey, Australian Pelican, Australian Darter, Little Black Cormorant, Little Pied Cormorant, Black-necked Stork, Black Swan, Magpie Goose, Wandering Whistling Duck, Australian Black Duck, Grey Teal, White-eyed Duck (Hardhead), Brolga, Common Coot, Purple Swamphen, Dusky Moorhen, Banded Rail, Great Egret, Little Egret, Eastern Cattle Egret, Nankeen Night Heron, Royal Spoonbill, Australian White Ibis, Pied Stilt, Comb-crested Jacana, Spur-winged Plover, White-bellied Sea Eagle, Black Kite, Whistling Kite, Nankeen Kestrel, Torresian Imperial Pigeon, Crested Pigeon, Bar-shouldered Dove, Peaceful Dove, Red-tailed Black Cockatoo, Greater Sulphur-crested Cockatoo, Australian King Parrot, Pheasant Coucal, Shining Bronze Cuckoo, Common Kookaburra, Forest Kingfisher, Australian Swiftlet, Welcome Swallow, Large-billed Gerygone, Yellow-throated Scrubwren, Atherton Scrubwren, Spectacled Monarch, Grey Fantail, Willy Wagtail, Eastern Yellow Robin, Pale-Yellow Robin, Grey-headed Robin, Golden Whistler, Bower’s Shrike-Thrush, Rufous Shrike-Thrush, Brown Treecreeper, White-throated Treecreeper, Magpie-Lark, Mistletoebird, Yellow-faced Honeyeater, Bridled Honeyeater, Blue-faced Parrotfinch, Red-browed Finch, Common Mynah, Pied Currawong, Victoria’s Riflebird.
I remember my first visit to Hastie’s Swamp. A friend who had lived at Mareeba for several years promised hundreds of birds. We only saw seven, that is birds not species. It seems to get busy when other water bodies dry out. On a more recent visit we saw a very large flock of sarus cranes in a paddock nearby.
 
You have mentioned a few places that sound familiar.

1. Mareeba. Isn't this where David Gill later of the South Lakes Park fiasco in the UK had his original infamous Park where (some of) the animals were abandoned when he left? Or is that another Mareeba somewhere else?

2. The Curtain Fig tree- I can remember seeing this (unless there are several!) from my visit to the Cairns area a long while back now- and Kurunda too- we also had no luck with Cassowary.

Are you trying for Cassowary again elsewhere? Really want you to see one.;)
Yes to both questions. The park was not Gill’s original, he was at the height of his “success” at South Lakes when he started it. Gill did a runner as he was going to be prosecuted. It changed hands a few times but nobody could make it work.
 
The Curtain Fig tree- I can remember seeing this (unless there are several!) from my visit to the Cairns area a long while back now- and Kurunda too- we also had no luck with Cassowary.

Are you trying for Cassowary again elsewhere? Really want you to see one.;)
Yes the Curtain Fig is at Yungaburra. I just got into town so I should be able to put up a photo soon.

There are a few stranglers of note around though. There's one a bit north of here called the Cathedral Fig, for example.

I'm hoping I see a Cassowary too! When I was last here I didn't see any but thought "oh well, it's not difficult getting back here from New Zealand to try again" - and then twenty years went by!

I'll keep trying at a few different places. I think Cassowary are one of those birds that seem like they should be easy when in the right area but it just comes down to luck, and meanwhile people with no interest at all will see them no trouble without even appreciating how lucky they are.
 
Kuranda


Kuranda is a little village, basically a tourist village nowadays, in the hills above Cairns. There are a few wildlife attractions there, as well as markets and so forth. Twenty years ago I was up there and it was pleasant and quiet. I stayed in a cheap hostel and wandered round at night in the forest. Now the hostel is gone and the village seems to be simultaneously tacky and expensive, as well as crowded.

However, I thought it might offer an easily accessible site to try and see Cassowary because I knew they were found along Black Mountain Road just outside Kuranda. This is the road that the famous Cassowary House B&B is on with their resident Cassowary family. I stayed here as well, back then, but still didn’t see a Cassowary.

The Trans North bus between Cairns and Atherton has Kuranda as its first stop and it only costs AU$7.10 (or there is the Kuranda Railway or the SkyRail which are really expensive). If you catch the 10am bus it gets to Kuranda around 10.40am and the bus coming back is at 2.40pm, giving four hours there. For anyone not looking for wild birds this also gives ample time to visit the various tourist attractions here. For example, the Butterfly Sanctuary, Birdworld, and the Koala Gardens are all right next to each other, directly where the bus stops.




Because the bus to Kuranda wasn’t until 10am I had the morning free. I decided to return to Centenary Lakes and look for a Little Kingfisher. They had to be there somewhere.

The place I was currently staying at (the Cairns Sunland Leisure Park) was closer to Centenary Lakes than the Cairns City Backpackers and I could catch a quicker bus from there, so I got to the lakes earlier than otherwise. Despite this, the morning was really quiet. The entire way around Saltwater Lake the only birds I saw were a single Orange-footed Scrubfowl and a pair of Radjah Shelducks with a bundle of ducklings. I was feeling like this was going to be a thoroughly wasted morning.

As I came to Freshwater Lake I stopped to scan the grassy edges in case a rail happened to be out – and I saw a rail! For a second I thought it would be a Red-necked Crake but it was instead a Pale-vented Bush-Hen. Both would have been lifers for me, but I’d been looking for a Pale-vented Bush-Hen for a good while now so this was actually the preferable one for me.

Remarkably, as I was looking at the bush-hen I noticed a larger bird a couple of metres beyond it – a Black Bittern! Two rarely-seen birds here, in one view! Which should I photograph first? Well, the bush-hen obviously. Unfortunately the bittern flew off just as I started taking photos so I missed my chance with that one.

Even more unexpectedly, as I was trying to take photos of the bush-hen I heard a noise at my feet, looked down, and there was a second bush-hen walking along the water’s edge right beside me! As soon as we saw each other it flew across to join the first one. Now I had double the chances to get some usable photos!

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Then, in yet another twist, I saw a much smaller black rail walking along the water’s edge next to the bush-hens. Was that a Spotless Crake? No, it was in fact a bush-hen chick! This was quite an unbelievable morning after all.

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Pale-vented Bush-Hens are much smaller than you might expect. In photos they always look fairly large. Before I knew how small they were I had always thought of them as being maybe Weka size. I think the name “bush-hen” might have as much to do with that as their physical appearance. “Bush-hen” just has a large sound to it, the sort of name you’d give to a big gallinule.

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I had the birds in view for a good length of time, and took 85 photos (!) to try and ensure I’d get something which I could turn into a presentable picture. The photos are all quite grainy because they are small birds which weren’t close, so they had to be cropped quite heavily, but they are okay I think.

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After the bush-hens retired to the reeds I followed the track around to see if I could find the Black Bittern again. I couldn’t, but there were some Nankeen Night Herons instead. A chap walking past with binoculars – there are a lot of birders, both dedicated and casual, in Cairns – mentioned that there was a bird walk at 7.30am in the Botanic Gardens. I didn’t think I’d be seeing anything better than the bush-hens so figured I may as well join in the bird walk and see what they might be able to show me.

I didn’t stay for the whole bird walk because I had to leave to catch that bus to Kuranda. From what I saw I think it would be a good walk for people who are just casually interested in birds, or for birders who have just arrived in Cairns and wanted to get a handle on the local birds easily. Of course the fellows leading the walk will probably know any specific locations for birds, so it might also be a good activity if you were after birds which have reliable roosting habits (like frogmouths or owls).

They said the walk takes two to three hours, starting off in the gardens and then going around the Centenary Lakes. It’s not just birds either. There was discussion about various plants in the gardens like the Sausage Tree and the Handkerchief Tree, and they searched out some spiky caterpillars of the Cairns Birdwing which live on vines growing on the fence around the gardens.

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This is a Cairns Birdwing, a bad photo taken just before my camera died again – as it is doing regularly now. I think I’m going to have to buy a new camera.




Now is the Kuranda part of this post, with no further photos.

There were quite a few day-trippers getting out at Kuranda, although curiously only two got back on when the bus returned to Cairns. I guess the rest were going back down on either the Kuranda Railway or the SkyRail.

Kuranda sits beside the Barron River, and just on the other side of the bridge (on the Cairns side) is Black Mountain Road. It’s a short walk from the bus stop back over the bridge – there’s a pedestrian/bicycle lane on one side. There’s actually a Trans North bus stop right there beside the junction for Black Mountain Road, but only for the Cairns-bound bus. If coming up from Cairns the only stop is the one in Kuranda village.

The first bit of Black Mountain Road is sealed because it is lined with properties – saying “it is lined with houses” would give the wrong image because while they are houses it’s hardly a suburban sort of street. Further along the seal turns to a dirt road. A very very dusty dirt road. This is signed as the “Kuranda National Park”. Logging trucks go roaring past regularly in great clouds of dust. It’s not a pleasant road to be walking on!

It turns out that walking up Black Mountain Road hoping to see a Cassowary is a silly idea. The sealed section of the road is lined with properties, as I said, so you’re not likely to see a Cassowary. I mean, you might because they are there, but it would just be blind luck rather than a good chance. There is rainforest behind all those properties with driveways going back in, but all of that is obviously private property. Then the unsealed section of the road is just wall-to-wall dust. Everything is grey. No Cassowary in its right mind would be walking out there.

I had an idea that when I was in the area I would drop into Cassowary House and say hello. That would probably be my best chance for seeing one. I found their driveway and wandered in. There didn’t seem to be anyone home and the place is looking really run-down. Not just a bit messy, but looking like it’s half-abandoned with rubbish everywhere. I left quite quickly.

While writing this I had a look online to see if Cassowary House was even still operating. There are still adverts for it coming up but the last reviews I saw were a couple of years old, and then I came across a post on BirdingAus from Phil Gregory saying that he and his wife had sold the B&B in 2020 and moved elsewhere. I guess the new owners couldn’t keep it running. So that’s sad.

Back in Cairns in the afternoon I had a walk along the Esplanade. I wasn’t going to see anything new here (probably) but I thought I better go have a look for the Double-eyed Fig Parrots which live in the trees there.

At low tide the mud-flats of the Esplanade is the place for waders. I was there at high tide. There were a few little clusters of shorebirds on the beach right under the walkway, mostly Bar-tailed and Black-tailed Godwits and Great Knots, with a few Tereks and Red-necked Stints.

I spotted a Varied Honeyeater in the trees and eventually, almost literally in the last tree on the Esplanade, a fig parrot! I thought for a while I wasn’t going to get that on the list.




I saw 48 species of birds today:

Australian Brush Turkey, Orange-footed Scrubfowl, Australian Pelican, Australian Darter, Little Black Cormorant, Little Pied Cormorant, Radjah Shelduck, Australian Black Duck, Pale-vented Bush-Hen, Great Egret, Plumed Egret, Little Egret, Eastern Cattle Egret, Nankeen Night Heron, Black Bittern, Bush Stone-Curlew, Spur-winged Plover, Bar-tailed Godwit, Black-tailed Godwit, Great Knot, Terek Sandpiper, Red-necked Stint, Silver Gull, Caspian Tern, Osprey, Feral Pigeon, Torresian Imperial Pigeon, Rose-crowned Fruit Dove, Peaceful Dove, Red-tailed Black Cockatoo, Rainbow Lorikeet, Double-eyed Fig Parrot, Common Kookaburra, Forest Kingfisher, Welcome Swallow, Pale-Yellow Robin, Willy Wagtail, Magpie-Lark, White-breasted Woodswallow, Varied Honeyeater, Helmeted Friarbird, House Sparrow, Metallic Starling, Common Mynah, Black Butcherbird, Australian Figbird, Yellow Oriole, Spangled Drongo.
 
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This looks very like the car Wolverine and Deadpool were fighting in, which suggests that when people are banished to The Void it is actually Australia.

That checks out actually.

On a more serious note, you can clearly see the difference in vegetation colour between the sealed section of Black Mountain Road in the first photo and the unsealed section in this second photo (the car is just off the side of the road).
 

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@Chlidonias I'm not sure if you're still looking for a Cassowary, but I would highly recommend Etty Bay if you're able to make the trip down there! Saw my first wild cassowary on the beach there on my last trip up FNQ, and it was a truly phenomenal experience. I do hope you see one at some point, best of luck!
 
@Chlidonias I'm not sure if you're still looking for a Cassowary, but I would highly recommend Etty Bay if you're able to make the trip down there! Saw my first wild cassowary on the beach there on my last trip up FNQ, and it was a truly phenomenal experience. I do hope you see one at some point, best of luck!
I discussed Etty Bay a few posts back. The closest bus is at Innisfail, so it's not somewhere I can get to very easily.
 
I think Cassowary are one of those birds that seem like they should be easy when in the right area but it just comes down to luck, and meanwhile people with no interest at all will see them no trouble without even appreciating how lucky they are.

Yes, some folk I know were up there and one crossed a road in front of them. They knew what it was and even got a fleeting photo. Sometimes you see photos of one wandering around at a beach resort too. Huge element of luck like most/all wildlife.
 
Cairns: Ivan Evans Walk


Yesterday afternoon, after returning from Kuranda, I had been checking eBird to see if there had been any new sightings of the specific birds I was after and I saw that Buff-breasted Paradise Kingfisher had a new record from a site called the Ivan Evans Walk. I checked where this was on the map – in the southwest of the city in a suburb called Bayview Heights – then checked the bus routes and discovered it was an easy one to get to. The bus #141 runs that way every half an hour, and it is just a five minute walk from the bus stop on Toogood Road to the end of Ellen Close where the track starts.

The Buff-breasted Paradise Kingfisher is a breeding migrant to Australia from New Guinea, like the Metallic Starling. It is here between November and April, but only in the Wet Tropics. It is also a rainforest bird, nesting in holes dug into termite nests, so seeing them requires being in north Queensland at the right time of year and in the right habitat. Or you could go to New Guinea and see them there.

From the eBird records for the Ivan Evans Walk it seems like this is a regular site for these kingfishers so I was cautiously optimistic.


It was another very hot day. Usually it is cooler under the trees out of the direct sun, but on this track it was sweltering. There were various birds twittering unseen in the trees. I could hear pigeons crashing about in the canopy as well, and there was the pattering of small fruits raining down as they fed, but I couldn’t see any of them. I still haven’t seen a Wompoo Fruit Pigeon on this trip so I’m always trying to see what pigeons are in the trees. The only ones I saw here today were the usual Torresian Imperial Pigeons.

The trail wound uphill through the forest. It took a while because I was moving very slowly, checking constantly for kingfishers perched in trees. I passed a couple of locals on a little hike who said they had never seen a kingfisher here. At the top there was a seat and a Cryptic Honeyeater, only the third bird I’d seen here after an Orange-footed Scrubfowl and the Torresian Imperial Pigeons.

I kept going down the other side of the hill. I had seen two or three arboreal termite nests already but none had holes in them. I knew the kingfishers also nested in terrestrial termite mounds, and a short distance along the downhill track I saw a mound with a very obvious hole dead-centre. I checked it out through my binoculars. It definitely looked like a kingfisher hole. This might be a jackpot.

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I moved further along the trail so that I wasn’t too close to the potential nest site and waited ... for about one minute. That’s when a dark bird flashed across the trail and landed on a branch behind a tree trunk. I moved a bit to the side, and there was a Buff-breasted Paradise Kingfisher. Despite being extremely colourful it didn’t really stand out at all in the low light of the forest, although through my binoculars the colours were certainly clear enough.

It flew to a different branch which was further away but in plain view. I snapped a few photos, not expecting them to turn out at all, then the bird flew to a new branch, and then flew away altogether.

Looking at the photos on my camera screen I could see the colours but otherwise they looked awful. Later, when I could view them better on my laptop, I took the “best” of them and turned it into what you see below.

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This forest was really quiet. Having successfully found the kingfisher I just went back to the hotel. I only saw seven birds species while there (Orange-footed Scrubfowl, Torresian Imperial Pigeon, Buff-breasted Paradise Kingfisher, Cryptic Honeyeater, Yellow-spotted Honeyeater, Helmeted Friarbird, and Black Butcherbird).

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This is the Yellow-spotted Honeyeater


On the way out I found a huge stick insect hanging off a car’s wing mirror. They are so big in Australia that they camouflage themselves as vehicle accessories instead of twigs. I moved it to a nearby tree just in case whoever owned the car killed it, or in case it was seen by a passing butcherbird.

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I saw a very low 19 species of birds today – but I was only chasing one particular bird:

Orange-footed Scrubfowl, Bush Stone-Curlew, Feral Pigeon, Torresian Imperial Pigeon, Peaceful Dove, Greater Sulphur-crested Cockatoo, Rainbow Lorikeet, Buff-breasted Paradise Kingfisher, Willy Wagtail, Magpie-Lark, White-breasted Woodswallow, Cryptic Honeyeater, Yellow-spotted Honeyeater, Helmeted Friarbird, House Sparrow, Metallic Starling, Common Mynah, Black Butcherbird, Australian Figbird.
 
Cairns: Cattana Wetlands again


I went back to the Cattana Wetlands on this day. The last eBird report from here for Green Pigmy Geese was still over two weeks ago but I was hopeful. The signage at the wetlands said they were common residents, and the frequency chart on eBird showed them here all year round. Where-ever they have disappeared off to, they have to be returning some time soon.

Getting there this morning was a bit of a mess. Two buses are required, one to James Cook University and then the #112 for the last little bit. From where I’m staying now the #123 bus goes straight to JCU which is easy, but it’s only hourly. I went out to catch the #123 which connects with the first #112, initially waiting at the wrong stop but luckily checking the location in time and going down the road to the correct stop. There was already a lady waiting there for the #123 to JCU.

The thing I’ve found with the #123 is that (unlike most of the buses here) it is very often late, sometimes by 15-20 minutes. Today it didn’t arrive at all. A #123 did come by, but it was going in the other direction, into the city centre (the bus loops around at Raintrees, so in both directions they pass along the same stretch of road here).

We waited and waited but the bus clearly wasn’t coming. In the end I caught a bus into the city centre and then caught a different bus out to JCU where I arrived in time to catch a #112 bus at 8.52am, getting to the wetlands much later than I would have done.

The visit was basically the same as last time: very hot, very few birds, and largely uninhabited lakes. Jabiru Lake is the one the pigmy geese are likely to be on. It is big and covered in water lilies. It’s perfect for them. I scanned over every inch of it. Not a sign. I don’t know why they would even leave – it’s a permanent water body with permanent food available. I am perplexed.

However, I did see one of the other birds Cattana is known for. While scanning along the lily-pads in front of the reed-beds I spotted a White-browed Crake darting about over the leaves. This isn’t a lifer for me – I’ve seen it in several countries before, including in Australia (at Centenary Lakes in 2008, when it was a lifer) – but it was still a bird I was looking out for because it’s been years since I saw my last one.

I thought I’d try for some photos, even though it was probably too far away, but this was one of the times when my camera wouldn’t turn on at all.

I sat in the hide at the Kingfisher Pool for a long time as well, hoping a Little Kingfisher might turn up, which didn’t happen.

I ended this visit with no lifers and only one year-bird, and with slightly fewer species seen than last time (34 birds today versus 37 birds on the last visit).




These are the 34 species of birds I saw today:

Orange-footed Scrubfowl, Australian Darter, Little Black Cormorant, Little Pied Cormorant, Magpie Goose, Australian Black Duck, White-browed Crake, Great Egret, Plumed Egret, Little Egret, Eastern Cattle Egret, Royal Spoonbill, Australian White Ibis, Bush Stone-Curlew, Comb-crested Jacana, Spur-winged Plover, Black-fronted Dotterel, Feral Pigeon, Torresian Imperial Pigeon, Bar-shouldered Dove, Peaceful Dove, Red-tailed Black Cockatoo, Rainbow Lorikeet, Welcome Swallow, Willy Wagtail, Magpie-Lark, White-breasted Woodswallow, Helmeted Friarbird, Chestnut-breasted Mannikin, Scaly-breasted Munia, Common Mynah, Spangled Drongo, Australian Figbird, Black Butcherbird.
 
Cairns to Yungaburra


I’m skipping out a day here – yesterday was the last day in Cairns before going to Yungaburra and I just used it as a catch-up day, spending it inside writing blogs. I went to the supermarket down the road and that was the only thing I did outside. I don’t know what the temperature was this day, somewhere in the high 30s I guess. It was boiling!

The next morning I took the bus round to Cairns Central and caught the 10am Trans North bus up to Atherton.



I had been in Atherton several days ago, and the intention then had been to continue on to the little town of Yungaburra which is close to Lake Eacham where there are a number of birds I wanted to see, including Cassowary. This didn’t work out because on the day I was going to go there was no affordable accommodation in either town for that night. I went back down to Cairns for the interim.

Now I was back. I had contacted Atherton Taxis to check that they did go to Yungaburra and how much it would cost (they do and it costs AU$55 one-way), and they said just to call when the taxi was needed as opposed to pre-booking it.

For the accommodation I had booked five nights at a hostel called On The Wallaby. They’d had no availability on the Friday so I had extended my stay at the Cairns Sunland Leisure Park for an extra night (that was the catch-up day at the start of this post).

Then, just after booking it, I got an email saying that the booking was cancelled. I rang them up and it turned out that the room was already booked and “somehow” the booking site had double-booked it. They could still fit me in, but I’d have to change rooms halfway through my stay.



There were a few other people getting off the bus at Atherton and I wondered if I’d be able to share a taxi if any of them were continuing on to Yungaburra. One was an English girl who I had helped in Cairns with getting her heavy suitcase into the luggage hold of the bus. I asked where she was going, she said Yungaburra, and I asked how she was getting there. She was going to volunteer at a place and was being picked up, so I managed to get a free ride with her instead of having to pay the AU$55 for a taxi. Then when I got to Yungaburra I found $50 on the ground – I was $100 up!

On The Wallaby was a hostel back in the day (I had stayed here twenty years ago), now it is an “eco lodge” so they can charge more for the same thing. Check-in wasn’t until 4pm. I hung out at a cafe until 3pm and then went and hung out for the last hour inside the common area at the hostel where I could use their Wifi.

The booking I’d originally made was five nights for NZ$400. Now, because I had to pay at the reception, I had to pay their room rate instead of the discounted one I’d had, which made it AU$400, which is NZ$466 – an extra $13 per night! Good thing I had found that $50 earlier!

The hostel is very quiet, with only three or four other guests (which does make me question why my booking had to have been cancelled and why I’d had to swap rooms in the middle when there seems to be almost no-one else here). Nevertheless, it’s a pretty good place to stay and I’d recommend it. I think it gets full at specific times though because they are on the circuit of a tour company from Cairns called Uncle Brian’s (which would be an alternative way of getting to Yungaburra without a car, albeit a more expensive way than what I did).

[Edit: just after posting this I was told that there are Uncle Brian's tours coming in every day this week from tonight, with thirty-odd people staying each night. So it won't be peaceful for much longer!]



After successfully checking in I walked to the Curtain Fig, which is in a patch of Mabi forest on the edge of town, about 2km from the hostel. It was raining very lightly. I took my umbrella but didn’t use it.

I stopped at the Platypus viewing area just before the turn-off to the Curtain Fig, where I continued my streak of not seeing a Platypus in Yungaburra. I never saw one here last time I was at Yungaburra, and the same this time. This is supposed to be a “guaranteed” spot for them, but I don’t think that’s true in the slightest. Several others I talked to had not seen them here either.

Just after the Platypus viewing area the town ends and farmland starts, and then Curtain Fig Tree Road is just on the left ahead. It wasn’t even 5pm yet and already streams of Spectacled Flying Foxes were winging their way across the sky. It doesn’t get dark until 7pm.

The first 500 metres of Curtain Fig Tree Road passes between fields but then the forest begins, with the Curtain Fig itself being about 500m further on. The forest area is fairly large west-to-east but the road goes in a roughly south direction so there is less than a kilometre before you hit fields again.

It was really humid in the forest along the road. Every time I saw a bird, the eye-pieces of my binoculars would fog up as soon as I raised them to my face. I saw a Yellow-faced Honeyeater on the edge but otherwise the only bird I managed to see clearly while in the forest was a Lewin’s Honeyeater. It was kind of frustrating!

The Curtain Fig forest is supposed to be really good for spotlighting, with a lot of possums and other nocturnal mammals found here, and also tree kangaroos. As I walked up and down the road waiting for dark the trees were already full of the flying foxes feeding on flowers.

I saw something moving up in the branches and, although I assumed it was just a flying fox, I had a look in case it was a big bird. It wasn’t a bird, or a flying fox. It was a Green Ringtail Possum. It wasn’t even dark yet, and I could watch it clambering about amongst the leaves just through my binoculars without the need of torchlight.

That was the only possum I saw though. After dark I walked along the road, all round the Curtain Fig boardwalk, along the road again. I did see some eye-shine way up high which I think must have been another Green Ringtail, but that was it. No Coppery Brushtails, no White-tailed Rats, no bandicoots. I think it’s quite clear by now that I don’t know what I’m doing.



I realised while writing this that I had forgotten to mention Eyes On Wildlife tours in my posts about Atherton. They do birding tours but also nocturnal tours for mammals. When I was staying in Atherton I had emailed them to see if they had any tours going out on the nights I was there which I might be able to join on, but they were fully booked except for one morning when I could have done a half-day birding tour of the Tablelands. However because I was only one person I would have had to pay double (the tours are minimum two people, at AU$220 per person), so I gave that a miss.

Last time I was in Yungaburra I had gone out with Alan’s Wildlife Tours (and seen Green Ringtails, Coppery Brushtails, and Lumholtz’s Tree Kangaroos) but he has retired now. I have just asked in the Yungaburra Information Centre if there is anyone else doing night tours here now but they didn’t know of anyone.

So it is all down to me now.





I saw 19 species of birds today:

In Cairns or from the bus:

Australian Brush Turkey, Australian Black Duck, Bush Stone-Curlew, Feral Pigeon, Torresian Imperial Pigeon, Welcome Swallow, Black-faced Cuckoo-Shrike, Willy Wagtail, Magpie-Lark, Common Mynah.

Additionally in Yungaburra:

Purple Swamphen, Eastern Cattle Egret, Spur-winged Plover, Emerald Dove, Rainbow Lorikeet, Forest Kingfisher, Yellow-faced Honeyeater, Lewin’s Honeyeater, Australian Figbird.
 
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My first room at On The Wallaby,:

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And the room I've just moved to. That's a Buff-breasted Paradise Kingfisher on the wall:

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And what On The Wallaby means:

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Yungaburra – Lake Eacham



Yungaburra is near two crater lakes, Lake Eacham and the larger Lake Barrine. Both are surrounded by a ring of forest, and both have a walking trail encircling them, 3km long in the case of Lake Eacham and 5km in the case of Lake Barrine.

I had my usual list of birds I wanted to see, the most important ones for Lake Eacham being the Cassowary and the Tooth-billed Bowerbird. Second tier were Barred Cuckoo-Shrike and White-headed Pigeon (the latter bird is found over a much wider area than the others so I’d be bound to find it eventually but I was getting fed up with not seeing it anywhere yet!). Then there was White-eared Monarch, Mountain Thornbill, and White-browed Robin which on eBird all have less robust sighting charts at Lake Eacham. In fact, I picked up a bird checklist for the lake at the information centre in Yungaburra and White-browed Robin isn’t even on it, the Mountain Thornbill is characterised as a rare seasonal visitor (i.e. it moves higher or lower depending on the time of year, although the eBird records are scattered through the whole year), and the White-eared Monarch is classed as an uncommon resident.



When I’d had to call the hostel the other day about the cancelled booking, the lady on the phone had said I “need a car” here. When I said I would just be walking to Lake Eacham, she said emphatically that this wasn’t possible because it was much too far to walk. This is not true of course. I did it this morning easily.

From Yungaburra I walked along the highway going east. This is a country highway so it is a narrow two-lane road with minimal walking or cycling space. However I was walking it early, before 6am, and there were just a few cars. It’s just over 3km to the junction with Lake Barrine Road where you turn right. Curiously, Lake Barrine is north of Lake Eacham (i.e. you would turn left at this junction to get there, rather than turning onto Lake Barrine Road). I had estimated this stretch to take 30 minutes but it is mostly uphill and took 40 minutes. It is also farmland so is completely open, something to bear in mind if walking it in the middle of the day.

Also worth noting is that at this junction there is a cafe called The Gillies if you want coffee or food. They are open at 6am but closed by 3pm or earlier.

From the junction it is only a few hundred metres to Lake Eacham Road on your left. The forest starts immediately after The Gillies, so even though walking to the lake from this point takes about an hour it is through forest the whole way.

It was still early, maybe 6.30am when I reached the forest, but already hot and so humid that I had the same issue as the previous day where my binoculars steamed up every time I tried to see through them.

First animal seen as I began walking up Lake Eacham Road was a Musky Rat-Kangaroo foraging on the side of the road in the leaf litter. These are tiny diurnal macropods found only in the northern rainforests, which are thought to resemble the earliest forms of kangaroo. They are in their own family which was diverse during the Miocene but which now contains just this species as the sole living representative.

I had seen Musky Rat-Kangaroos last time I was in north Queensland but had forgotten how small they are, I guess like a big Guinea Pig. I saw another one later along the road – it was still quite dim along here so I didn’t even try for photos – and a third at Lake Eacham itself where the light was much better but the animal scarpered as soon as it saw me.

The only birds seen along Lake Eacham Road were Brush Turkey, Spectacled Monarch, Bower’s Shrike-Thrush and Eastern Whipbird. Partly this was due to not being able to see the birds with the aforementioned fogging of binocular lenses, but also I just didn’t see much along here anyway even though there was a lot of bird-song in the forest beyond.


The road had been quite busy, with cars regularly zooming by – it’s not the safest there so you have to constantly be aware of vehicles – and when I got to the lake I discovered that it was a very popular place for swimming. Today was a Sunday and even this early there were a dozen or more cars here. After I’d done my first circuit of the lake the car park was packed and there were swarms of people. This is mostly a weekend thing – I came back on Tuesday and there weren’t many visitors in comparison. Even on Sunday relatively few of them were on the trail though.

The crowds don’t seem to bother the birds. I counted at least a hundred Great Crested Grebes flocking out on the lake. It’s odd seeing these in tropical Queensland!

I hung around for a bit in the picnic area because there were birds in the trees, including Fairy Gerygones. I didn’t see any lifers today but new additions for the trip were these Fairy Gerygones and a bit later in the forest a Wompoo Pigeon (finally!). Most of the birds I saw today I had seen earlier at either Mt Hypipamee or at Hallorans Hill in Atherton.


The 3km trail which encircles the lake is entirely within the forest. It is an easy trail, a bit up and down, and unpaved. It took me three hours the first time I went round (going slowly, obviously) and two hours the second time. Both times I went in a clockwise direction. When I came back on Tuesday I did it in both directions. I think anti-clockwise might be a bit easier. I got a leech on the Tuesday.

I didn’t feel like I was seeing much today. As with the road there was a tonne of bird-song, but I couldn’t see many birds. Nevertheless the total at the end of the day came out at about thirty species for Lake Eacham which isn’t bad. I think it was more a perception thing, where I was only seeing birds gradually through the day, just individual birds here and there along the trail, so it didn’t seem like I was seeing many. Also I wasn’t seeing any of the birds I was specifically looking for which didn’t help.

On the non-bird side of things I saw my first Boyd’s Forest Dragon – it jumped off its branch as I walked by and ran further into the forest, which is at odds with what they are “supposed” to do when you walk by! Still, that’s the only reason I saw it, so I’m not complaining.

Another great sighting, which I wasn’t really expecting, was a Lumholtz’s Tree Kangaroo. I did see this species last time I was in Yungaburra years ago, but it was at night. This time, while looking up into the trees trying to see some birds, I happened to look to the side a little and right there, sitting out in plain view, was a tree kangaroo.

It couldn’t really go anywhere from the little bare tree where it was, so it just sat there looking at me. This was an absolutely perfect photo opportunity. Did my camera work? No. This time it wouldn’t even turn on. I tried several times to make it work, to no avail. The tree kangaroo by now had sunk a little lower behind the branch, to try and become invisible. I resorted to taking a picture on my phone, which was awful because it had to be zoomed so far out and the phone itself takes pretty rubbish photos unless they are something close. I’ll put the photo in the next post to show it, but it’s definitely not going anywhere near the gallery! I miss having a working camera.


On my second circuit of the lake I met the girls who had given me a lift to Yungaburra from Atherton, and then when I walking back along Lake Eacham Road later they passed in their car and asked if I wanted a lift. So we went to Lake Barrine.

I had been going to go to Lake Barrine on one of my other days. This would save me the walk. Heavy rain came through right after we arrived at Lake Barrine, so we just had lunch in the Tea House there. Out on the lake there were even more Great Crested Grebes than at Lake Eacham. There were also pelicans here, which weren’t at Lake Eacham.

There is a 5km trail around Lake Barrine but with the heavy rain I just went back to Yungaburra with the girls.

I didn’t go out spotlighting tonight.




I saw 42 species of birds today:

Great Crested Grebe, Australian Brush Turkey, Orange-footed Scrubfowl, Australian Pelican, Little Pied Cormorant, Little Black Cormorant, Spur-winged Plover, Wompoo Fruit Pigeon, Bar-shouldered Dove, Rainbow Lorikeet, Common Kookaburra, Forest Kingfisher, Azure Kingfisher, Welcome Swallow, Black-faced Cuckoo-Shrike, Golden-headed Cisticola, Brown Gerygone, Large-billed Gerygone, Fairy Gerygone, Yellow-throated Scrubwren, Large-billed Scrubwren, Spectacled Monarch, Black-faced Monarch, Pied Monarch, Willy Wagtail, Pale-Yellow Robin, Grey-headed Robin, Bower’s Shrike-Thrush, Rufous Shrike-Thrush, Eastern Whipbird, Magpie-Lark, Silvereye, Mistletoebird, Sahul Sunbird, Yellow Honeyeater, Dusky Myzomela, Chestnut-breasted Mannikin, Common Mynah, Australian Figbird, Spotted Catbird, Victoria’s Riflebird, Torresian Crow.
 
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