Went to Featherdale again yesterday - this is a great place to see Australian wildlife!
Lots of tourists(and tourist buses.)
Lots of primary children.(It's good for little kids - reasonably limited area; plenty of access to quiet kangas etc.)
Most people were there I suppose for the mammals; koalas, wombats, Tas. devils, kangaroos - all the usual suspects. 13 species from the kangaroo family on display, ranging from reds through yellow-footed rock wallabies, rufous bellied and red-necked pademelons to long-nosed potoroos.
Other interesting mammals included ghost bats and lots of quolls, 7 enclosures for eastern and tiger quolls.(Hard to see them though; just spotted blobs sleeping in logs.
For me, however, the true value of Featherdale is in the birds on display.
Lots of the usual avicultural subjects (cockatoos and other parrots; finches; pigeons and doves) but also a lot of softbills and nectar feeders (New Holland, brown, white cheeked and yellow-tufted honeyeaters; white-browed and white-breasted wood swallows; rainbow bee-eaters; grey-crowned babblers etc.)This is one of the (very) few places in Australia where you can see Nicobar pigeons,too.
Five southern cassowaries, including a young female which was bred at the park 18 months ago.
Every one of the 9 species of Australian owls was on display, mostly in pairs in large, high aviaries (the lesser sooty is gorgeous, with its dark eye-shadow!)
There were 12 species of birds of prey, in separate species aviaries (not all in together, like at a lot of other places) and also mostly in pairs. Stand-outs for me were the beautiful black-shouldered kites (pure white everywhere but their shoulders) and the Pacific bazas, with their crests and football shirt-like plumage.
The big drawback of Featherdale is that everything is packed in - aviaries back on to kanga. yards etc. There is not a lot of room; certainly none to spare for, say, a patch of bushland. The park is planted out, but everything is packed in. There's nowhere to expand either. When the park started it was surrounded by orchards and poultry farms; now its solid suburbia.
Over all, the place was clean and very tidy. Every enclosure had been or was being raked over. One small feature impressed me - kids could get free animal food to feed the kangas in the contact area - most similar places charge a bomb for a cup of what looks like stale breakfast cereal for this purpose.
Lots of tourists(and tourist buses.)
Lots of primary children.(It's good for little kids - reasonably limited area; plenty of access to quiet kangas etc.)
Most people were there I suppose for the mammals; koalas, wombats, Tas. devils, kangaroos - all the usual suspects. 13 species from the kangaroo family on display, ranging from reds through yellow-footed rock wallabies, rufous bellied and red-necked pademelons to long-nosed potoroos.
Other interesting mammals included ghost bats and lots of quolls, 7 enclosures for eastern and tiger quolls.(Hard to see them though; just spotted blobs sleeping in logs.
For me, however, the true value of Featherdale is in the birds on display.
Lots of the usual avicultural subjects (cockatoos and other parrots; finches; pigeons and doves) but also a lot of softbills and nectar feeders (New Holland, brown, white cheeked and yellow-tufted honeyeaters; white-browed and white-breasted wood swallows; rainbow bee-eaters; grey-crowned babblers etc.)This is one of the (very) few places in Australia where you can see Nicobar pigeons,too.
Five southern cassowaries, including a young female which was bred at the park 18 months ago.
Every one of the 9 species of Australian owls was on display, mostly in pairs in large, high aviaries (the lesser sooty is gorgeous, with its dark eye-shadow!)
There were 12 species of birds of prey, in separate species aviaries (not all in together, like at a lot of other places) and also mostly in pairs. Stand-outs for me were the beautiful black-shouldered kites (pure white everywhere but their shoulders) and the Pacific bazas, with their crests and football shirt-like plumage.
The big drawback of Featherdale is that everything is packed in - aviaries back on to kanga. yards etc. There is not a lot of room; certainly none to spare for, say, a patch of bushland. The park is planted out, but everything is packed in. There's nowhere to expand either. When the park started it was surrounded by orchards and poultry farms; now its solid suburbia.
Over all, the place was clean and very tidy. Every enclosure had been or was being raked over. One small feature impressed me - kids could get free animal food to feed the kangas in the contact area - most similar places charge a bomb for a cup of what looks like stale breakfast cereal for this purpose.