Monday, 24 May 2021

Birding Kilcoy and Beyond!

Part of the birding crew - Saturday afternoon.

A small group from Birdlife Sunshine Coast did a little birding trip for the weekend of the 21 to 23 May travelling from Nambour to Kilcoy to Murgon to Gympie and home. Successful birding and socialising was the aim of the weekend and I think it is fair to say that that was achieved.

"Thanks for a really enjoyable weekend, both for birding and socially. I got two lifers - one each day (White-bellied cuckoo-shrike and Spotted Harrier). So that was an extra buzz. I appreciated all that I learnt about raptors and those pesky little thornbills". 

"Thank you for a wonderful weekend away in the Kilcoy, Murgon areas.  It was great and I really enjoyed every part of it - the social side, birds, walks etc".
- Participants' comments and not just made up by me...

After one participant dropped out because of illness 15 people boarded the Burnside SHS bus for a jaunt around the western edges of the Conondale Ranges.

Friday night took us to the town of Kilcoy where most enjoyed the noisy atmosphere of the local pub on Friday Fifteen Dollar Steak night. The pub was filled with people from properties where I am sure steak is not an unusual treat. However all of the noise of the pub was comparatively welcome. Road work began after dusk right outside of our Hotel and the noise of jack hammers, generators more than punctuated our sleep. The Hotel, to their credit rang and offered an apology the following morning. It clearly was not their fault but they were embarrassed that they could not have warned us.

So sleepy birders begun Saturday with a picnic in the park and a quick perusal of birds there. I now realise that I have no recollection of any birds at the park and remember my only real consideration was a mumbled plea for coffee…

I do however remember calling Striped Honeyeaters from gums some 100 metres distant from the bus as we drove off.

First destination on the road north from Kilcoy was the now deservedly famous Yabba Road – a road with a few species uncommon further east; Yellow faced, Fuscous and Yellow tufted Honeyeaters, Dusky Woodswallow, Speckled Warbler, Brown Treecreepers, Jack Winter, Varied Sitella to name a few. Crested Shrike tits, Restless Flycatcher, Grey Shrike Thrushes plus all three lorikeets; Little, Scaly breasted and Rainbow rounded out our list. The Diamond Firetails continued their invisibility sadly.

Speckled Warbler [John Kooistra]

Peach Trees hosted our lunch stop. We did not have long to bird here however but a few day birds were encountered; New Holland Honeyeater and Rose Robin being the standouts.

Further north F Galetly Road proved an important stop. Lifers for some including Yellow Thornbills, Weebills and White breasted Cuckoo Shrikes were seen as were Paradise Riflebird and Regent Bowerbirds.

Weebill [Robyn Combes]

On the ridge top was some remnant dry vine thicket which clearly was home to Black breasted Button quails as evident by some recent platelets.

Kinbombi Road and then Kimbombi Falls and then Kimbombi Dam added mammals in the form of Eastern Grey Kangaroo and Whiptail Wallaby. On the dam some seven shovelers were the stand out among a small range of waterfowl. The Falls are home to Herberton Rock Wallabies but on this occasion they were invisible.

Murgon was our Saturday evening destination. The Motor Inn was ok with the food and wine average.

Sunday began with another brekky picnic. This time with a view from a ridge looking southwards towards Murgon. Superb Blue Wrens were strangely invisible but vocal. Kestrels were seen here too.

Travelling east towards Goomeri we picked up Spotted Harrier, WT Eagle, Kestrel, Brown Falcon, Brown Goshawk and Black shouldered Kites as well as good views of Superb Blue Wren.

Goomeri, home to the Goomeri Bakery among other things had Yellow and Yellow rumped Thornbills and our House Sparrow tick for the weekend.

A quick re-visit to the Kimbombi district again netted a decent flock of Red rump Parrots – some twenty birds and our weekend’s first White winged Choughs. The dam did not add any new birds but better views, thanks to the changed positioning of the sun, of the common species there.

Galah and the aptly named Red rumped Parrots [Robyn Combes]

A few stops at wetlands in Gympie added White Pygmy Goose, Darter, Magpie Goose, Reed Warbler and Yellow tailed Black Cockatoos to our weekend Tally of 136 [by my count].  

Birds seen:

  1. Australian Brush Turkey  
  2.  Brown Quail  
  3.  Magpie Goose  
  4.  Black Swan  
  5.  Australian Wood Duck  
  6.  Cotton Pygmy-Goose  
  7.  Grey Teal  
  8.  Pacific Black Duck
  9. Australian Shoveler  
  10.  Hardhead  
  11.  Australasian Grebe  
  12.  Great Crested Grebe  
  13.  Rock Dove  
  14.   Spotted Dove  
  15.  Brown Cuckoo-Dove  
  16. Crested Pigeon  
  17.  Peaceful Dove  
  18.  Bar-shouldered Dove  
  19.  Topknot Pigeon  
  20.  Tawny Frogmouth  
  21.  Australasian Darter  
  22.  Little Pied Cormorant  
  23.  Great Cormorant  
  24.  Little Black Cormorant  
  25. Australian Pelican  
  26. White-necked Heron  
  27.  Eastern Great Egret  
  28.  Intermediate Egret  
  29.  Cattle Egret  
  30.  White-faced Heron  
  31.  Little Egret  
  32.   Australian White Ibis  
  33.  Straw-necked Ibis  
  34.  Royal Spoonbill  
  35. Black-shouldered Kite  
  36. White-bellied Sea-Eagle  
  37.  Whistling Kite  
  38.  Black  Kite  
  39.  Brown Goshawk  
  40.  Grey Goshawk  
  41.  Spotted Harrier  
  42. Wedge-tailed Eagle  
  43. Brown Falcon  
  44.  Nankeen Kestrel  
  45. Purple Swamphen  
  46. Dusky Moorhen  
  47.  Eurasian Coot  
  48.  Black-winged Stilt  
  49. Black-fronted Dotterel  
  50.  Masked Lapwing  
  51. Yellow-tailed Black-Cockatoo  
  52.  Galah  
  53.  Little Corella  
  54.  Sulphur-crested Cockatoo  
  55.  Rainbow Lorikeet  
  56.  Scaly-breasted Lorikeet  
  57.  Little Lorikeet  
  58.  Australian King Parrot  
  59.  Crimson Rosella  
  60.  Pale-headed Rosella  
  61. Red rumped Parrot
  62.  Pheasant Coucal  
  63. Shining Bronze-Cuckoo  
  64.   Fan-tailed Cuckoo  
  65.  Laughing Kookaburra  
  66. Rainbow Bee-eater  
  67.  White-throated Treecreeper  
  68.  Brown Treecreeper  
  69.   Regent Bowerbird  
  70.  Red-backed Fairy-wren  
  71.  Variegated Fairy-wren  
  72.  Superb Fairy-wren
  73. Speckled Warbler
  74.  White-browed Scrubwren  
  75.  Brown Gerygone  
  76.  White-throated Gerygone  
  77.  Striated Thornbill  
  78.  Buff-rumped Thornbill  
  79.  Brown Thornbill
  80. Yellow Thornbill
  81. Yellow rumped Thornbill
  82. Weebill
  83.  Spotted Pardalote  
  84.  Striated Pardalote  
  85. Jacky Winter
  86.  Lewin's Honeyeater  
  87.  Yellow-faced Honeyeater
  88.  Fuscous Honeyeater
  89. Yellow Tufted Honeyeater
  90. Bell Miner  
  91. Noisy Miner
  92.  Brown Honeyeater
  93.  New Holland Honeyeater
  94.   White-throated Honeyeater
  95.  White-naped Honeyeater
  96.  Blue-faced Honeyeater
  97.  Noisy Friarbird
  98.  Little Friarbird
  99.  Striped Honeyeater
  100. Eastern Whipbird
  101.  Varied Sittella
  102.  Crested Shrike-tit
  103.  Black-faced Cuckoo-shrike
  104.  White-bellied Cuckoo-shrike
  105.   Golden Whistler
  106.  Rufous Whistler
  107.  Little Shrike-thrush
  108.  Grey Shrike-thrush
  109.  Australasian Figbird
  110. Dusky Woodswallow
  111.  Grey Butcherbird
  112.  Pied Butcherbird
  113.  Australian Magpie
  114.  Pied Currawong
  115.   Grey Fantail
  116.  Willie Wagtail
  117.  Torresian Crow
  118.  Restless Flycatcher
  119.  Magpie-Lark
  120. White winged Chough
  121. Apostlebird
  122.  Paradise Riflebird
  123.  Rose Robin
  124.  Eastern Yellow Robin
  125.  Golden-headed Cisticola
  126.  Australian Reed-Warbler
  127.  Tawny Grassbird
  128. Silvereye
  129.  Welcome Swallow
  130. Tree Martin
  131.  Common Myna
  132.  Mistletoebird
  133.  Double-barred Finch
  134.  Red-browed Finch
  135.  House Sparrow
  136.  Australasian Pipit

Mammals seen
Eastern Grey Kangaroos
Whiptail Wallaby
Red necked Wallaby
Eurasian Hare

Other fauna: Common Eastern Froglet - Crinea signifera - heard
Butterflies: 
Common Crow
Monarch
Lesser Wanderer
Large Grass Yellow
White Migrant
Meadow Argus
Black Jezabel
Scarlet Jezabel
Small Grass Yellow
White-banded Plane
Glasswing
Southern Pearl White [thanks to Michele Grant] 

Kind Regards

Ken Cross

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