Chlidonias presents: Bustralia

Townsville to Cairns


Travel day! There’s not much to write about. I caught the Greyhound bus at 8am and was in Cairns at c.2.30pm. The arrival time was supposed to be 1.40pm but there were roadworks in several places along the route which slowed things down considerably.

The bus was half empty which was surprising because when I was booking it most of the seats were marked as occupied. However, when the bus reached Mission Beach that was when the other half of the passengers got on.

I kept my eyes open for Cassowaries along the road to Mission Beach but none were seen. This is a bird very high on my “wanted list”. When I was in the Cairns area ten years ago, everywhere I went I was just missing Cassowaries. At Kuranda, Cow Bay, Cape Tribulation, the Daintree - there was always a Cassowary there the day before, or sometimes even just an hour before, but never when I was there. I even stayed a night at Cassowary House in Kuranda specifically to see their resident family of Cassowaries, but the two days I was there were the first days in ages when the birds didn’t turn up.

Etty Bay (way south of Cairns) is now the recommended spot for Cassowary, but the closest bus stop is at Innisfail which is still many kilometres distant and I wouldn’t fancy walking along the main highway. I’ll just be trying my luck instead at the other usual spots (Kuranda etc).

In Cairns I stayed at the Cairns City Backpackers. It’s just around the corner from the Greyhound stop at “Cairns Central” (the train station, the main city bus terminal, and also a mall), and it had the cheapest rooms on the booking sites (although still NZ$76 per night – and that’s a room without an attached bathroom). In Cairns, and also in some other cities like Darwin, many of the hostels have age-specifications now, usually something like 16-35, which means I can’t just stay anywhere even if I wanted to be in a dorm.

I’m in two minds as to whether I’d recommend staying here. The location is convenient in that it is very close to the buses and a mall with a supermarket, and it is quiet, but it is very basic for the price, the shared kitchen is tiny and not very clean, and there aren’t enough bathrooms (although both the latter points weren’t an issue when I was there because there seemed to be only a few other people staying there).

The main negative however was that the key to my room was the same key which unlocked both the gates at the street (which are closed at night). When I checked in the guy said the key also unlocked the gates but it wasn’t until a bit later that this sunk in and I realised that this meant that every door key unlocked the gate, which must mean that every room has the same lock, which means that everyone staying there can get into every room.



I was only in Cairns for two days then went up to Atherton. I’m back in Cairns now (as of posting this), so if anyone has suggestions or ideas on where to go for wildlifey things – either in Cairns itself or in the surrounding areas - then feel free to share and I can see what works for me.



I saw just 12 species of birds today - I didn’t see much of anything from the bus, and I didn’t do anything in Cairns after arrival:

Little Black Cormorant, Spur-winged Plover, Silver Gull, Black Kite, Red-tailed Black Cockatoo, Rainbow Bee-eater, Welcome Swallow, Willy Wagtail, White-breasted Woodswallow, House Sparrow, Common Mynah, Australian Magpie.

Things to do around Cairns:

Cairns Esplanade - I’m sure you have most of these birds anyway but is a very easy spot to access plus I’ll never get sick of seeing Red-tailed Black Cockatoos. I’m sure you have Varied Honeyeater and Double-eyed Fig Parrot already but if you don’t the northern end is good for both of them.

Cairns Aquarium - must visit aquarium, in my opinion the best in Australia. Highlight species include but are not limited to Olive Sea Snake, Blue Blanquillo, Irwin’s Turtle, Tully River Grunter and Porcupine Ray.

Cairns Botanic Gardens & Centenary Lakes - must visit spot, I would visit multiple times if possible, it’s off a main road and a popular tourist spot so it shouldnt be hard to access. There’s a wide range of habitats here and most visits will yield 30+ species. Top birds here include Lovely Fairywren and Little Kingfisher, there’s also a Papuan Frogmouth roost which I can give you details to. There’s just so so many birds here, and if youve had your fill at the botanic gardens and lakes you can head on walking trail north where there’s a patch of rainforest. I’ve not birded it and it’s not amazing but there are things like Fruit Doves and Buff-breasted Paradise Kingfishers there.

Cairns Airport Mangrove Boardwalk - I’ve not visited this place as it was closed when I went but having a quick check on ebird says that Lovely Fairywren was sighted here recently. I don’t think any of the other birds would be too interesting to you but it appears easily PT’able so if you have a free day it could be worth checking out.

Cattana Wetlands - I had a rather poor time here only seeing a handful of species of birds but going off of ebird lists it has real potential. This is another spot for Little Kingfisher and if you didn’t get it at Hastie’s Swamp on the Tablelands this is apparently the best spot for Green Pygmy Goose around Cairns.
 
Cairns Botanic Gardens & Centenary Lakes - must visit spot, I would visit multiple times if possible, it’s off a main road and a popular tourist spot so it shouldnt be hard to access. There’s a wide range of habitats here and most visits will yield 30+ species. Top birds here include Lovely Fairywren and Little Kingfisher, there’s also a Papuan Frogmouth roost which I can give you details to. There’s just so so many birds here, and if youve had your fill at the botanic gardens and lakes you can head on walking trail north where there’s a patch of rainforest. I’ve not birded it and it’s not amazing but there are things like Fruit Doves and Buff-breasted Paradise Kingfishers there.
To add onto this - I heard Red-necked Crake in the rainforest boardwalk that sits opposite the botanic garden entrance at night during a bugging tour. I hadn't realised this species was found so close to the city. Also a known spot for Striped Possum. I saw Rakali, Northern Brown Bandicoot, Red-legged Pademelon and White-tailed Giant Rat well here in the rainforest section.
Cattana Wetlands - I had a rather poor time here only seeing a handful of species of birds but going off of ebird lists it has real potential. This is another spot for Little Kingfisher and if you didn’t get it at Hastie’s Swamp on the Tablelands this is apparently the best spot for Green Pygmy Goose around Cairns.
Green Pygmy-Goose was seen very well at Cattana Wetlands a few months back. A pair in the main lagoon. A good spot for White-browed Crake so I hear as well.
 
To add onto this - I heard Red-necked Crake in the rainforest boardwalk that sits opposite the botanic garden entrance at night during a bugging tour. I hadn't realised this species was found so close to the city.
I've also heard from a friend that you have a slim chance of Tube-Nosed Bats spotlighting in the Botanic Gardens, they're apparently at least some what vocal and really small.
 
Cairns: Centenary Lakes


The first place I visited in Cairns was the Centenary Lakes and Botanic Gardens. There were four birds in particular I wanted to find which had continuous eBird records from here: the Papuan Frogmouth, Australian Swiftlet, Little Kingfisher and Metallic Starling.

I’m not sure why I didn’t see the swiftlet when I was in Cairns years ago. I rather suspect I had just ignored them amongst the martins and swallows. It wasn’t until the White-rumped Swiftlet of the Pacific was split in twain that I noticed I hadn’t seen it. I thought “oh nice I’ll have an armchair tick for Australia”, only to then find I hadn’t seen it yet.

On the other hand, I know why I hadn’t seen the Metallic Starling yet – it is a breeding migrant from New Guinea. I have made a lot of comments about being in northern Australia at the wrong time of years for the waterbirds, but it is the perfect time of year for a few very specific birds which either wouldn’t be seen at all or would be much more difficult / unlikely to be seen mid-year when most birders would be visiting.

The Metallic Starling is one such bird, the Buff-breasted Paradise Kingfisher is another. The Torresian Imperial Pigeon is a New Guinea migrant as well, but I’m told that more and more of them are staying year-round so now aren’t as time-dependent as the others. The Channel-billed Cuckoos I saw in Townsville would also technically fall in here, because they overwinter in New Guinea and Indonesia, but when in Australia they aren’t restricted to the far north, instead spreading out over the whole country (and even on the odd occasion reaching New Zealand!).



The Centenary Lakes and Botanic Gardens are easy to access, with several city bus routes passing by on different roads. As mentioned in the Townsville posts, city buses in Queensland are currently just 50 cents per ride or $1 for an all-day ticket, and just like in Townsville half the time the drivers on the Cairns buses just wave passengers on for free.

I took a bus which went along the south side of the lakes, so I walked up through them first, then to the gardens (north of the lakes) where I didn’t see anything so won’t mention them again, and then back down through the lakes.

There are two lakes, the Saltwater Lake which is heavily surrounded by mangroves, and the Freshwater Lake which has mostly open shores and is easier for birding. Around the area are also gardens and dense forest, the latter with a good boardwalk running through it.

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Great Egret on Freshwater Lake


If a birder came here and it was their first time in northern Australia they would be seeing a lot of new birds – just picking some out from what I saw today, they’d have the likes of Orange-footed Scrubfowl, Torresian Kingfisher, Sahul Sunbird, Brown-backed Honeyeater, Yellow Honeyeater, and Black Butcherbird. However I wasn’t seeing anything new.

Coming back along the track by the Freshwater Lake after doing a full circuit of the lakes and gardens, I met a chap carrying binoculars who asked what I was looking for. First I said Papuan Frogmouth and he said that they hadn’t been at their regular roosts for weeks, and also that I had just missed the Rufous Owls with their chick by a week (luckily I had managed to see one of those in Darwin already). Then he added that the frogmouths are commonly seen at night along the boardwalk.

Little Kingfisher? Not seen by anyone in weeks.

Metallic Starling? Flying around everywhere, he said. But if I wanted to see them at their nests, there was a colony in the carpark of the Raintrees Shopping Centre.

I guess one of my birds being likely was better than none of them.

I continued walking around the lake, and almost straight away there was an Australian Swiftlet flying low over the water. These are said to be common, and from eBird records they must be, but I have hardly seen any. There was this individual bird today, and then I saw a few at Mt Hypipamee a bit later. And, so far, that’s it.



Unlike the Australian Swiftlets, the Metallic Starlings are common around Cairns at this time of year and can be seen flying about pretty much everywhere. I had actually already seen some from the bus I took up from Townsville, but they were in flight and I didn’t want to count them as seen because a) it wasn’t good views, and b) I didn’t know if there might be some other bird which looked similar in flight.

The Raintrees Shopping Centre isn’t far away from the Centenary Lakes. In fact, the bus I caught to the lakes (the #130) is the same bus that goes to Raintrees, so I just waited for the next one to come around and headed off to find this Metallic Starling colony in order to get some proper views of them.

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The colony is the only one I’ve seen so my data-set is limited, but it might be the best one to see the birds at. The tree isn’t tall so all the nests are quite low and photography is easy, and being in the centre of a busy carpark the birds are unfazed by people. And of course access is easy because it’s at a shopping centre. An elderly gentlemen walking by while I was taking photos said that they are here every year and “you can set your watch” to their arrival.

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Immature Metallic Starling, looking very different to the adult birds.



I dropped back into the Centenary Lakes on the way back to the hotel, where an Osprey on Freshwater Lake, Brown-backed Honeyeater in Saltwater Lake’s mangroves, and White-bellied Cuckoo-Shrike were additions for the day-list.

At the end of the day I returned again to the boardwalk at Centenary Lakes to try for the Papuan Frogmouth. I wasn’t really expecting to see a frogmouth, to be honest. If someone says that a night bird is “commonly seen” at some location then you’re probably not going to see any. But they must be common here, because within a very short time after nightfall – maybe ten minutes or less - I had a frogmouth in my torchbeam.




I saw 35 species of birds today:

Australian Brush Turkey, Orange-footed Scrubfowl, Australian Darter, Little Black Cormorant, Little Pied Cormorant, Australian Black Duck, Great Egret, Plumed Egret, Australian White Ibis, Bush Stone-Curlew, Spur-winged Plover, Osprey, Feral Pigeon, Torresian Imperial Pigeon, Peaceful Dove, Red-tailed Black Cockatoo, Rainbow Lorikeet, Papuan Frogmouth, Torresian Kingfisher, Australian Swiftlet, Welcome Swallow, White-bellied Cuckoo-Shrike, Willy Wagtail, Magpie-Lark, White-breasted Woodswallow, Sahul Sunbird, Dusky Myzomela, Brown Honeyeater, Brown-backed Honeyeater, Yellow Honeyeater, Helmeted Friarbird, House Sparrow, Metallic Starling, Common Mynah, Black Butcherbird.
 
Cairns: Cattana Wetlands


My primary target today was the Green Pigmy Goose. I had looked through the eBird records and they are consistently seen all year round at the Cattana Wetlands. Pale-vented Bush-Hens and Little Kingfishers are also regularly reported there.

The Cattana Wetlands are not as directly accessible as the Centenary Lakes which (depending on where you are in the city) should be reachable fairly quickly with one bus. Cattana will require two buses and the timing needs to be considered in advance because many of the buses in Cairns only run once an hour.

The first bus takes you north from the city to James Cook University (JCU). There are several buses which do this route, and it will take about 40 minutes or more. The next bus is the #112 which is an hourly bus to Yorkeys Knob. This ride is only a few minutes long, followed by a ten minute walk to the wetlands. You also have the option of walking all the way from the University but it will take up to half an hour and it is very hot so I wouldn’t recommend that at this time of year.


The Cattana Wetlands isn’t a very large site but it has several lakes and ponds which are permanent water bodies, so it has year-round waterbirds. I’ll put a map in the next post showing the lay-out. The largest lake is Jabiru Lake (in Australia the Black-necked Stork is called Jabiru – but there were no Jabiru on this lake). To one side is Jacana Pool (with no Jacanas), and on the other the ephemeral Crake Pond (with no water and no crakes) and Cuckoo Lake (with no cuckoos), and then beyond them is Kingfisher Pool (with no kingfishers – there is some sort of pattern here).

I started off walking along the track which goes between Jabiru Lake and Crake Pond. Jabiru Lake has a lot of floating water plants so is good for Comb-crested Jacanas, which were skittering about chasing one another (unlike at Jacana Pool which has no water plants and no jacanas). It looked great for pigmy geese as well, but there were almost no ducks present and those few that were there were all Australian Black Ducks. There were barely even any egrets or other wading birds. It was most curiously empty.

I circuited round to Kingfisher Pool. This was a very shallow area of water with lots of mud banks and with upright sticks dotted about for kingfishers to use as perches. There was a hide here and, unlike most hides which are generally hot and muggy, this one had a nice breeze blowing right through. The only birds here were a Little Egret, some more Black Ducks, and a pair of Magpie-Larks.

This was shaping up to be a very disappointing day.


I continued on around the tracks intending to do a loop of Jabiru Lake. At the junction of the tracks where the map-boards are I had a most fortuitous encounter with another birder by the name of Drew. He was Australian but had just returned from many years living in the USA.

We got to talking, and headed around Jabiru Lake together. I told him about my round-Australia bus trip and that I was going up to Atherton tomorrow on the bus, whereupon he said that he was going to Atherton tomorrow as well because there was a morning bird-count happening at Hastie’s Swamp. Did I want a lift, perchance, and afterwards we could drive up to Mt Hypipamee to look for birds there, and then he could drop me at my hotel in Atherton when he went back to Cairns.

Well, I mean it would have been rude to say no wouldn’t it?


As we walked round Jabiru Lake we ran into Ash from Canberra and traded bird information while watching Crimson Finches and Scaly-breasted Munias.

Jacana Pool was bereft of birds of almost any kind, so Drew and I kept going round Jabiru Lake – despite much searching, still no Green Pigmy Geese amongst the lily pads – and came to a boardwalk following a creek through some forest.

There was a very good bird along here, when we saw a Black Bittern fly up suddenly from the creek onto a branch where it struck the typical “upright-stick pose” that bitterns favour. It stayed like that for a few minutes, then slowly shrunk its neck down and stalked away along the branch until out of sight.

We next headed over to the Kingfisher Pool where there were more birds than before - Magpie Geese, Royal Spoonbills, Australian White Ibis, Black-fronted Dotterels, and even a Common Greenshank had all turned up.

Then Ash turned up as well. We went back to the boardwalk to see if we could refind the bittern for him, which to my great surprise we did. As soon as we reached the spot Drew said “there it is”. And even better, while trying to get a better position a pair of Lovely Fairy-Wrens came out of the trees.


I think Ash said he had got six lifers today. I didn’t see any lifers myself, and had just three year-birds – Rufous Fantail, Black Bittern, and Lovely Fairy-Wren. The bittern was new for my Australian list (seen previously in Vietnam), and the fairy-wren was a bird I was wanting to see again even if it wasn’t a lifer. But snagging a ride not just to Atherton but to Mt Hypipamee, which was otherwise out of my reach, made this a very successful day in the end.




I saw 37 species of birds today:

Orange-footed Scrubfowl, Australian Darter, Little Black Cormorant, Little Pied Cormorant, Magpie Goose, Australian Black Duck, Little Egret, Eastern Cattle Egret, Nankeen Night Heron, Black Bittern, Royal Spoonbill, Australian White Ibis, Bush Stone-Curlew, Comb-crested Jacana, Spur-winged Plover, Black-fronted Dotterel, Common Greenshank, Feral Pigeon, Torresian Imperial Pigeon, Bar-shouldered Dove, Peaceful Dove, Red-tailed Black Cockatoo, Lovely Fairy-Wren, Large-billed Gerygone, Rufous Fantail, Willy Wagtail, Magpie-Lark, White-breasted Woodswallow, Sahul Sunbird, Crimson Finch, Chestnut-breasted Mannikin, Scaly-breasted Munia, House Sparrow, Metallic Starling, Common Mynah, Spangled Drongo, Australian Figbird.
 
Map of Cattana Wetlands:

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Kingfisher Pool:

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And a flood marker on the entry road, so presumably don't visit in the wet season!

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Again very nice birds seen. For the starlings do they prefer Master of puppets or the Black album? And will you travel further north? There are some nice species to tick, but might be difficult to get to even if you would drive.
 
And will you travel further north? There are some nice species to tick, but might be difficult to get to even if you would drive.
There are about a dozen birds found in the far north which would be new for me, but buses only go as far as Cooktown. After that are 4WD roads. There might be a couple I could potentially get around Cooktown but it's not worth the time and money if I can't go further.
 
There are about a dozen birds found in the far north which would be new for me, but buses only go as far as Cooktown. After that are 4WD roads. There might be a couple I could potentially get around Cooktown but it's not worth the time and money if I can't go further.

Are palm cockatoos one of the far north birds on your list there?
 
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.
 
An old bower of the Golden Bowerbird at Mt Hypipamee:

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The dust blowing across the landscape at the lake by Mareeba:

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And my room at the Nightcaps Hotel in Atherton:

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Atherton


I didn’t need to walk to Hastie’s Swamp now, having been there yesterday. My local birding spot in Atherton would instead be the Hallorans Hill Conservation Park, which is (in part) a remnant of Mabi Forest, a type of rainforest endemic to the tablelands. It is largely gone now, cleared for farming except for a few scattered patches which were too steep and stony for farming. There are still some larger protected areas, such as Wongabel and at the Curtain Fig by Yungaburra, but most of it is tiny fragments like at Atherton. There is also an isolated remnant at Shiptons Flat just south of Cooktown. It’s sobering to look at a map showing the former extent of it and to think about how all that forest wildlife used to occur across the entire tablelands and is now basically doomed in the long run.

Hallorans Hill is right within Atherton, just a few streets away from the hotel, but the first thing I did this morning was to take a walk to Platypus Park. This is also close by, on the south edge of town about a kilometre from the hotel along the main street (which is also the highway towards Hastie’s Swamp).

I figured there should be a few birds in the trees there, but the main reason of course was to see a Platypus. Regarding seeing Platypus on the Tablelands, most people recommend Yungaburra which has a viewing area on the creek, but Platypus Park is basically guaranteed in my experience. I didn’t even see them at Yungaburra when I was there years ago but I’ve seen them every time I’ve been to Platypus Park. In fact, on my previous visit I was in town over my birthday so walked down to the park before dawn in order that the first animal I saw that day would be a Platypus, which it was.

The park itself is really small, just a pond and creek with a bit of “forest” around it. The only birds I saw there were Black Ducks, a Willy Wagtail, and a Brush Turkey. But less than a minute after reaching the pond there was a Platypus swimming by.

After this challenging search I walked back through town to Hallorans Hill.


Atherton has all the usual street-birds of the east coast. Noisy Miners have made a reappearance, the first since Adelaide (Yellow-throated Miners are the inland version which I had been seeing since then). Silvereyes are another Atherton bird not seen since Adelaide.


Hallorans Hill is in David Andrew’s “The Complete Guide to Finding the Mammals of Australia” as a site for possums, especially the Long-tailed Possum (although he calls it “Halloran’s Crater” - the crater is hidden in the forest and now fenced off from access). His directions for access are for the far end of the park, i.e. when driving to arrive at the car park at the top of the hill. I had a look online and found the park’s website which said that foot access was from Rotaract Park at the corner of Louise and Cook Streets. This was much closer to where I was, and when I looked at Google Maps I saw that the park was in a long wedge shape. If I came in from Louise Street then I could walk all the way to the top through forest, looking for birds along the way, instead of walking along streets to the top.


This turned out to be a really nice site with lots of birds. If walking in from Rotaract Park the path goes through several stages of forest. Initially there is a stretch of dense broadleaf forest running alongside a creek, and then there is open grassy eucalyptus forest as the path ascends. The path crosses two roads – Twelfth Ave and Dalziel Ave. At this second road there is a sudden change in forest. On one side is eucalyptus and on the other is Mabi rainforest. It is a very dramatic switch and must be to do with rain shadow (the road runs along the hill crest I think). When the path reaches Dalziel Ave you don’t cross directly to the other side, you follow a grass track to the right for maybe a hundred metres and then cross.

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This termite nest was in a tree by the grass path along Dalziel Ave. The hole is a kingfisher nest and when I looked at it through my binoculars I could see a beak inside. For an excited second I thought it might be a Buff-breasted Paradise Kingfisher but then I realised I was looking at a pale lower bill and there was a darker upper bill above it – in other words it was the bill of a Common Kookaburra.


The path has been paved up to Dalziel Ave but once you reach the Mabi Forest it becomes a rough trail, going downhill via rock steps and then winding through the forest and up the hill again until you reach the car parking area at the very top. The start of the track on Dalziel is really close to the top though. If for some obscure reason you didn’t want to wander through the Mabi Forest you can just walk a short distance up Dalziel until you reach a water tank by the gate for The Summit Rainforest Retreat, and next to the tank is a flat track which runs along just under and to the car park.


The initial bit of forest, along the creek by Rotaract Park, had lots of Red-legged Pademelons which are very small rainforest-dwelling wallabies. They are quite brightly coloured but astonishingly difficult to see. When they aren’t moving they blend in against the leaf litter covering the ground, and they tend not to move until they think you’ve seen them. Often I would pause to see if there were any birds in nearby trees, and one or more pademelons would suddenly bound away from a few metres away where they had been basically invisible. They were difficult to photograph as well because they invariably sat right behind a stick or leaf, or if there wasn’t anything to obscure them would wait just long enough for you to almost take a photo and then hop quickly behind a tree.

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Birds seen along the creek included Spectacled Monarchs which I’ve seen many times already on this trip, and also the (kind of) similar Black-faced Monarch which I think is a nicer bird. Then there were Brown and Large-billed Gerygones, Large-billed Scrubwren, and Pale-Yellow Robin.

I could hear the “strangled cat” call of a Spotted Catbird and after a bit of searching through the canopy found it on the ground (I generally can’t tell where sound is coming from at all because I’m deaf in one ear). There was a pair of the catbirds, one carrying about twigs so presumably nesting here. Hallorans Hill seems like it must be a reliable site for Spotted Catbirds because I saw several birds each day. Most of the time they were on the ground, hopping about quietly searching for food, rather than being up in the trees where I expected them to be.

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Spotted Catbird


The eucalyptus areas were fairly quiet and the birds in them were the more common ones you’d see everywhere. The Mabi Forest is where you need to focus your attention when here.


On the final section of track, from Dalziel Ave to the summit, I quickly saw Eastern Whipbird (a widespread forest bird) and some more of the north Queensland specialities like Grey-headed Robin and Victoria’s Riflebird which I’d already seen yesterday at Mt Hypipamee.

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Grey-headed Robin


The best bird of the day was on the return walk, going back up the rock steps to Dalziel Ave, when I spied a Pied Monarch.

Unlike its relatives such as the Spectacled Monarch which acts like a typical flycatcher, sallying out from a perch to snatch insects out of the air or off leaves, the Pied Monarch acts more like a treecreeper. It sticks to the tree trunks, usually high up like this one was, scuttering rapidly about grabbing insects off the bark. When you see one it is very easy to track because it is so strikingly patterned, but they must normally be difficult to get photos of because they are high up and never really stop moving. They don’t just move up and down either, they keep circling the trunks and reappearing at random places.

This is a photo I got of one I saw the next day which was low down on a tree, and even though it was very close (almost too close for the camera!) not a single photo was fully in focus because the bird was in constant motion.

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I went back up the tracks in the evening to look for possums. There are several species here, including Green Ringtails and Coppery Brushtails. Apparently there are possums everywhere, common as anything, falling out of trees they are so common. I didn’t see a single one. Not even a sound or the tiniest bit of eye-shine.

I did see some mammals, but not until I was back in the first section of forest, in the eucalyptus just below Twelfth Ave. This bit is a little mix of eucalyptus and broadleaf, and the ground is largely bare. I could hear animals moving about through the dry leaf litter and eventually tracked down a pair of Northern Long-nosed Bandicoots and then several more soon afterwards. This is probably the best spot to look for bandicoots when here because there is very little ground vegetation, unlike in the rainforest area where there is thick undergrowth or in the main eucalyptus areas where the ground is covered in long thick grass.

On the walk back through the streets I also saw Spectacled Flying Foxes feeding in a flowering eucalyptus which made four mammals for the day, all “new” for the year (and trip) but none of them lifers.




I saw 36 species of birds today:

Australian Brush Turkey, Orange-footed Scrubfowl, Australian Black Duck, Bush Stone-Curlew, Crested Pigeon, Peaceful Dove, Greater Sulphur-crested Cockatoo, Rainbow Lorikeet, Common Kookaburra, Welcome Swallow, Brown Gerygone, Large-billed Gerygone, Large-billed Scrubwren, Spectacled Monarch, Black-faced Monarch, Pied Monarch, Willy Wagtail, Eastern Yellow Robin, Pale-Yellow Robin, Grey-headed Robin, Eastern Whipbird, Magpie-Lark, Silvereye, Scarlet Myzomela, Noisy Miner, Red-browed Finch, Chestnut-breasted Mannikin, House Sparrow, Common Mynah, Australian Magpie, Pied Currawong, Australian Figbird, Olive-backed Oriole, Spangled Drongo, Spotted Catbird, Victoria’s Riflebird.
 
Atherton, day two


Each day in Atherton was getting hotter. Today it was mid-30s.

I did the same as yesterday, but without the visit to Platypus Park. I saw two more birds than yesterday - 38 species versus 36 - but nothing I saw today was new in any way (not trip, nor year, nor life). There were some noticeable differences in the line-up of birds seen on each of the two days.

Yesterday I had seen Australian Black Duck (at Platypus Park); Australian Magpie and Pied Currawong (both in the streets); and Eastern Yellow Robin, Scarlet Myzomela, Red-browed Finch, Chestnut-breasted Mannikin and Olive-backed Oriole (mostly in the eucalyptus areas).

I didn’t see any of those today, but extra birds instead were Black-faced Cuckoo-Shrike (in the street); Australian King Parrot (at Rotaract Park); White-browed Scrubwren and Yellow-throated Scrubwren (in the first section of forest by the creek); Forest Kingfisher, Red-backed Fairy-Wren and Rufous Whistler (in the eucalyptus areas); and White-throated Treecreeper, Rufous Fantail and Bower’s Shrike-Thrush (in the Mabi Forest).


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Male Red-backed Fairy-Wren


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And another photo of the Pied Monarch


I only saw one mammal species – the Red-legged Pademelons. My attempts at spotlighting were just as futile as the previous night. In fact, more futile because I didn’t even see any bandicoots. If I didn’t know any better I’d say there aren’t any possums here at all!


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Red-legged Pademelon




These are the 38 species of birds I saw today:

Australian Brush Turkey, Orange-footed Scrubfowl, Bush Stone-Curlew, Crested Pigeon, Peaceful Dove, Greater Sulphur-crested Cockatoo, Rainbow Lorikeet, Australian King Parrot, Common Kookaburra, Forest Kingfisher, Welcome Swallow, Black-faced Cuckoo-Shrike, White-throated Treecreeper, Brown Gerygone, Large-billed Gerygone, White-browed Scrubwren, Yellow-throated Scrubwren, Large-billed Scrubwren, Red-backed Fairy-Wren, Spectacled Monarch, Black-faced Monarch, Pied Monarch, Rufous Whistler, Willy Wagtail, Rufous Fantail, Pale-Yellow Robin, Grey-headed Robin, Bower’s Shrike-Thrush, Eastern Whipbird, Magpie-Lark, Silvereye, Noisy Miner, House Sparrow, Common Mynah, Australian Figbird, Spangled Drongo, Spotted Catbird, Victoria’s Riflebird.




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Australian Brush Turkey, connoisseur of fine foods
 
Atherton to Cairns


Another brief “travel day” post.

Part of the reason I’d come up to Atherton – other than for Hastie’s Swamp – was to continue on to Yungaburra from which I could reach Lake Eacham where there are various forest birds I haven’t seen yet. It’s only about 15km between the two towns but there is no bus. Last time I was in the area I stayed at a hostel in Yungaburra called On The Wallaby which did pick-ups from Atherton. They no longer do this so the only way now (if you’re arriving in Atherton by bus) is to take a taxi or hitch. I’m not a hitching kind of person, so it would have to be the taxi which would cost AU$55 one-way.

I hadn’t booked the accommodation in Yungaburra in advance because I needed to check on the taxi situation when I got to Atherton (I didn’t want to rely on what Google was telling me), but then when attempting to organise this leg once I got to Atherton I found there was a one-night gap in room availability. On the day I would have been checking out of the Nightcaps Hotel in Atherton and moving on to Yungaburra the only available hotels in both towns were hundreds of dollars on the booking sites. On that night the cheapest room at the Nightcaps was marked at NZ$300, way over twice what I was currently paying!

I decided that the best thing to do would be to take the bus back to Cairns, have a search for some extra birds around there for a couple of days, and then come back up when rooms were affordable.




For this final day in Atherton, before catching the bus, I was intending to make an early morning visit back to Hallorans Hill but with being out really late the last two nights looking for invisible possums I didn’t wake up until well after sunrise. So I did nothing instead.

It has been hotter up here than expected. Today it was 37 degrees in Atherton. I had arrived in Darwin during a heat-wave, left there about two weeks before a cyclone smashed the city, and have now hit another heat-wave in the Cairns area. Hopefully not to be followed by a cyclone.


There are two Trans North buses a day between Atherton and Cairns, the first at 7am and the second at 1.30pm (in the other direction leaving Cairns at 10am and 4pm). I caught the afternoon bus, which got me to Cairns at 3.30pm, and then I took a city bus round to my new lodgings at the Cairns Sunland Leisure Park which is in the western suburb of Manunda, quite close to the Raintrees Shopping Centre (that’s where I saw the colony of Metallic Starlings a few days ago).

The room I’d booked at the Cairns Sunland Leisure Park was NZ$10 more per night than the Cairns City Backpackers (about NZ$86 versus NZ$76) but the latter had just been a small basic room – a bed and a desk, and nothing else – whereas my room (a cabin) at Sunland is basically an apartment with a kitchenette. I’ll put some comparison photos in the post below.

The only real issue with it is that there is no Wifi in the cabins, only in the reception area, and I got my ankles covered in bites from what seem to be fleas.

Another thing is that I was planning on going up to Port Douglas to try and find some Green Pigmy Geese, and maybe the Daintree or somewhere depending on what other birds I still “need”. Trans North does a run three times a week up to Cooktown and back, so I can get to either for the day (they are amongst the stops along the way), but the bus leaves at 6.30am from Cairns Central. If I’d been at the Cairns City Backpackers that’s just around the corner from Cairns Central so nice and easy. But there isn’t a city bus early enough to get me there by 6.30am from the Cairns Sunland Leisure Park, and it’s about an hour’s walk. When I come back down to Cairns later from Yungaburra I’ll see about getting a closer hotel for that purpose.




I only saw 12 species of birds today because I wasn’t doing anything:

Eastern Cattle Egret, Bush Stone-Curlew, Spur-winged Plover, Feral Pigeon, Torresian Imperial Pigeon, Peaceful Dove, Welcome Swallow, Willy Wagtail, Magpie-Lark, White-breasted Woodswallow, House Sparrow, Common Mynah.




***As of this post I am four days behind today (28 November). I have been back in Cairns for four full days. I went to Kuranda on the first day to look for Cassowary (unsuccessfully), the Ivan Evans Walk on the second day for Buff-breasted Paradise Kingfisher (successfully), and back to Cattana Wetlands on the third day just in case of Green Pigmy Geese (still not there, but I did see White-browed Crake). Today is a catch-up day, and tomorrow I go to Yungaburra where I’ll probably fall behind in posts again.
 
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The room I'd had at the Cairns City Backpackers - this is the whole room:

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And the room I have at the Cairns Sunland Leisure Park:

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