Location 101, 102 + 103 – Hinterland Regional Park, Schuster Park and The Spit, Gold Coast – 31st August 2024:
I don’t like the Gold Coast region south of Brisbane too much. It’s highly developed and generally has poorer diversity of wildlife especially closer to the coast. Despite this, I decided to give the area a go and visited three new sites today – a larger weedy park in the hinterland, a mangrove-rich habitat along a creek and a coastal beach walk opposite SeaWorld Gold Coast. It was a very hot end to winter today approaching 35 degrees today but at least it wasn’t raining for once. I have spent multiple weekends scouring around for various targets but simply haven’t had much luck at all this winter. I guess that is the part of having a wildlife thread but the warmer season is set to be booming with a wide range of species around popping up. The Sacred Kingfishers and Pacific Koels are already calling, huge numbers of butterflies have been emerging joining the winter species and dragonflies are quickly emerging from the weediest waterways. Today’s first stop was the Hinterland Regional Park which is located in Mudgeeraba. A humble place; a large open dog park/picnic area with a bush portion that weaves through some small waterbodies and farmland. The main highlight was several Black-shouldered Kites hovering in full view over the hot grass. I often see Black-shouldered Kites from the Gold Coast train in farmland. Flocks of Scarlet Honeyeaters, Brown Honeyeaters and Red-backed Fairywrens were generally common in the thicket as well. A male Australian King-Parrot made me smile as it fed on its own while a Sulphur-crested Cockatoo was ripping up the lawn as they love to do all the time. Australian Wood Ducks and a Laughing Kookaburra were sheltering from the heat. There were also swarms of butterflies today, freshly emerged and mating frantically. Dozens of Lemon Migrants, Brown Ringlets, Varied Eggfly and incredible-looking Utetheisa moths which have the most outrageous patten of orange, white and black with a yellow head flush. They are worth searching up.
Laughing Kookaburra sheltering from the heat
Schuster Park was more productive than the first park. Starting out as a dairy farm, it has a rather traditional-looking open park with Galah, Australian Wood Duck, Australasian Figbird, Masked Lapwing and Welcome Swallow, which if you follow the creek past the playground, there is a small swampy mangrove walk further along Tallebudgera Creek, framed by waterfront houses in Gold Coast suburbia. There are far superior mangrove walks in Brisbane (Wynnum Mangrove Boardwalk and Nudgee Beach) and the Sunshine Coast (Maroochy Wetlands) but it was a rare opportunity to visit some small, albeit fragmented, mangrove habitat in the Gold Coast. The calls of Torresian Kingfishers filled the mangroves with their piercing cries and I came across a nest as well with a pair nearby with a Blue-faced Honeyeater inspecting the area nearby. Torresian Kingfishers were excellent to see here close to the border to New South Wales as they are uncommon southwards. There were some common but always-good-to-see species of small birds including lots of Golden Whistlers, Rufous Whistlers, Superb Fairywrens, Red-backed Fairywrens, Silvereyes and a lovely little flock of Red-browed Firetails feeding on small section of mud under mangroves. I heard Mangrove Honeyeaters but only saw a single Lewin’s Honeyeater. There were hundreds and hundreds of Semaphore Crabs as I reached the boardwalk section of the loop. They are square-bodied crabs that are common along the east coast. Like the Fiddler Crabs, they have very long eye stalks. The claws are purple on adults, but most of the ones I saw were orange-clawed juveniles. A large juvenile White-bellied Sea-Eagle flew over as well and Olive-backed Orioles were common and frequent. An alright site if you are in the area but the Tallebudgera Creek Conservation Park (location #21) would provide access to more mangrove habitat plus a longer walk, optimising changes for more species.
Torresian Kingfisher
Galah
Finally, it was getting very hot but I decided to complete the set. The Spit (Federation Walk is the birdy part) is an interesting one. It’s on the same street as SeaWorld Gold Coast and five minutes from the hustle and bustle of Surfers Paradise’s inner centre with its tall skyscrapers and was a pleasant surprise in the midday heat. It is a designated pathway that will lead you all the way through the Coastal Reserve to the Gold Coast Seaway from where you can take in scenic views of the coastline. Lots of coastal birds here among this unique slice of coastal dune habitat. The sandy well-vegetated beaches and crashing waves were home to a good range of species with the bulk of birds being Brown Honeyeaters, Double-barred Finches and there were lots of Great Crested Terns flying swiftly. A single Green Tree Snake raced along the sand and into a tall beach hibiscus. There is a lot of landcare that has gone into the Spit and volunteers have to regularly supplement water to establish the plantings further. These taps and irrigation networks made for fantastic perches for the main feature species here; swarms of Rainbow Bee-eaters. Probably over 50 were seen here and they were regularly moving from tap to tap. Some were feeding on the ground as well. Next time I visit SeaWorld, I will ensure I cross the road and revisit Federation Walk being a small slice of uncommon rewilded beach.
Rainbow Bee-eaters
I don’t like the Gold Coast region south of Brisbane too much. It’s highly developed and generally has poorer diversity of wildlife especially closer to the coast. Despite this, I decided to give the area a go and visited three new sites today – a larger weedy park in the hinterland, a mangrove-rich habitat along a creek and a coastal beach walk opposite SeaWorld Gold Coast. It was a very hot end to winter today approaching 35 degrees today but at least it wasn’t raining for once. I have spent multiple weekends scouring around for various targets but simply haven’t had much luck at all this winter. I guess that is the part of having a wildlife thread but the warmer season is set to be booming with a wide range of species around popping up. The Sacred Kingfishers and Pacific Koels are already calling, huge numbers of butterflies have been emerging joining the winter species and dragonflies are quickly emerging from the weediest waterways. Today’s first stop was the Hinterland Regional Park which is located in Mudgeeraba. A humble place; a large open dog park/picnic area with a bush portion that weaves through some small waterbodies and farmland. The main highlight was several Black-shouldered Kites hovering in full view over the hot grass. I often see Black-shouldered Kites from the Gold Coast train in farmland. Flocks of Scarlet Honeyeaters, Brown Honeyeaters and Red-backed Fairywrens were generally common in the thicket as well. A male Australian King-Parrot made me smile as it fed on its own while a Sulphur-crested Cockatoo was ripping up the lawn as they love to do all the time. Australian Wood Ducks and a Laughing Kookaburra were sheltering from the heat. There were also swarms of butterflies today, freshly emerged and mating frantically. Dozens of Lemon Migrants, Brown Ringlets, Varied Eggfly and incredible-looking Utetheisa moths which have the most outrageous patten of orange, white and black with a yellow head flush. They are worth searching up.
Laughing Kookaburra sheltering from the heat
Schuster Park was more productive than the first park. Starting out as a dairy farm, it has a rather traditional-looking open park with Galah, Australian Wood Duck, Australasian Figbird, Masked Lapwing and Welcome Swallow, which if you follow the creek past the playground, there is a small swampy mangrove walk further along Tallebudgera Creek, framed by waterfront houses in Gold Coast suburbia. There are far superior mangrove walks in Brisbane (Wynnum Mangrove Boardwalk and Nudgee Beach) and the Sunshine Coast (Maroochy Wetlands) but it was a rare opportunity to visit some small, albeit fragmented, mangrove habitat in the Gold Coast. The calls of Torresian Kingfishers filled the mangroves with their piercing cries and I came across a nest as well with a pair nearby with a Blue-faced Honeyeater inspecting the area nearby. Torresian Kingfishers were excellent to see here close to the border to New South Wales as they are uncommon southwards. There were some common but always-good-to-see species of small birds including lots of Golden Whistlers, Rufous Whistlers, Superb Fairywrens, Red-backed Fairywrens, Silvereyes and a lovely little flock of Red-browed Firetails feeding on small section of mud under mangroves. I heard Mangrove Honeyeaters but only saw a single Lewin’s Honeyeater. There were hundreds and hundreds of Semaphore Crabs as I reached the boardwalk section of the loop. They are square-bodied crabs that are common along the east coast. Like the Fiddler Crabs, they have very long eye stalks. The claws are purple on adults, but most of the ones I saw were orange-clawed juveniles. A large juvenile White-bellied Sea-Eagle flew over as well and Olive-backed Orioles were common and frequent. An alright site if you are in the area but the Tallebudgera Creek Conservation Park (location #21) would provide access to more mangrove habitat plus a longer walk, optimising changes for more species.
Torresian Kingfisher
Galah
Finally, it was getting very hot but I decided to complete the set. The Spit (Federation Walk is the birdy part) is an interesting one. It’s on the same street as SeaWorld Gold Coast and five minutes from the hustle and bustle of Surfers Paradise’s inner centre with its tall skyscrapers and was a pleasant surprise in the midday heat. It is a designated pathway that will lead you all the way through the Coastal Reserve to the Gold Coast Seaway from where you can take in scenic views of the coastline. Lots of coastal birds here among this unique slice of coastal dune habitat. The sandy well-vegetated beaches and crashing waves were home to a good range of species with the bulk of birds being Brown Honeyeaters, Double-barred Finches and there were lots of Great Crested Terns flying swiftly. A single Green Tree Snake raced along the sand and into a tall beach hibiscus. There is a lot of landcare that has gone into the Spit and volunteers have to regularly supplement water to establish the plantings further. These taps and irrigation networks made for fantastic perches for the main feature species here; swarms of Rainbow Bee-eaters. Probably over 50 were seen here and they were regularly moving from tap to tap. Some were feeding on the ground as well. Next time I visit SeaWorld, I will ensure I cross the road and revisit Federation Walk being a small slice of uncommon rewilded beach.
Rainbow Bee-eaters