Bear with me a
moment.
It took a little
longer in the coming than I had originally anticipated but come it must and
come it has. As intimated in the opening
crescendo, Raison d’etre, my entrance into the Bloggershpere, via Staffordshire Stray, was instigated by a
need to search out like-mined individuals domicile in the West Midlands; I was
in search of birding news and/or offers of help during our planned brief
sojourn back to Staffordshire and it seemed that as so many birders appeared to
be venturing forth into this avenue of communication it could be profitable to
join their ranks.
Staffordshire Stray was largely
successful. It aided me in my
pre-departure research and we even met a couple of birding bloggers at Belvide
Reservoir.
However, on our
return to Australia, the blog suddenly appeared moribund. At the time, October 2010, it didn’t appear
as if we would ever return to the UK; Trinidad & Tobago or even India held
more sway. The chances of coming across
any West Midland birders who had strayed that far afield in their pursuit of
birds seemed rather remote, although, as it turned out, during our Goa trip in
November/December 2012 we did meet up with a birder from Dudley.
Staffordshire Stray had one other glaring disadvantage; it lacked any direct reference to birds, bird watching or birdingor even ornithology. In a casual Google browsing session searching for “bird blogs,” Staffordshire Stray simply ailed to put in an appearance.
Birds of Allen Road followed on naturally. Birding the South Burnett seemed an appropriate pathway along which to introduce a wider reading public to the avifauna of the region, the pale of our primary birding activities. However, since October 2010, Fay and I have been on a number of birding trips beyond the South Burnett pale. Among the more notable destinations has been Sundown National Park in September 2011 and of course Goa during November/December 2012. All went unrecorded on the Bloggersphere; Staffordshire Stray somehow appeared an inappropriate outlet.
Chinchilla at the end of June 2013 was the final catalyst. We had devised the outing, had organized it to the last detail and had come away with a bucketful of good birds and memories but no blogspot in which to celebrate our successes.
The WAMBO BIRD TRAILS of 12 August 2013 was not to be allowed to suffer the same malaise.
Oddly enough, it had its nascence in Chinchilla; we picked up ta brochure at the Information Centre in town although it was a day or two after our return to Nanango before we came around to reading it. Or rather, before Fay came around to reading it. It was quite a revelation.
With the assistance of Doug Henning, Malcolm Wilson [Dalby area] and Doug & Bernice Seton [Bell/Bunya Mountains area] the former Wambo Shire Council [now incorporated into the broader Western Downs Regional Council] produced a six-page booklet entitled Birding Areas of the Wambo Shire. It opens with a taxonomic list before providing details of eight “trails,” each subdivided into a number of “sites” within the trail. Basic “mud maps” accompany each trail and each site is supplied with compass reference points. Each page carries a short description of habitat type and a brief list of the species that the intrepid explorer could expect to find along each trail.
Jandowae Trails [16 sites]
Kumbarilla Trail [8 sites]
Dingo Barrier Fence Trail [7 sites]
Broadwater Trail [1 site]
Bunya Foothills Trail [10 sites]
Bunya Mountains Trail [4 sites]
Warra Trail [7 sites]
Kaimkillenbun Trail [6 sites]
For reasons of expediency, our angle of approach, Fay and opened our Wambo Bird Trails account with Map 5, the Bunya Foothills Trail. Nr did we adhere strictly to the numerical order of sites, starting at 2 before moving on to 1 and catching up on ourselves at 3, 4, 5 and 6. At tht point we deemed retreat the better part of valour as the midday sun was becoming oppressive.
While we failed to find the primary target, Blue Bonnet, we did come across not one but ten Ground Cuckoo-shrikes. Watching the Torresian Crow being harassed by a pair of Nankeen Kestrels suggested the latter had a nest nearby and that they were determined to avoid losing their progeny to the voracious corvid. A little later we observed a solitary Nankeen Kestrel meet out similar malice to a Brown Falcon.
At 26 53' 56.1"S 151 39' 11.6"E, the sudden appearance of a pair of Wedge-tailed Eagles had the Torresian Crows, Little Corellas and a myriad of smaller birds all afluster and screaming.
That’s an awful
of birding beyond our normal pale!
Magpie-lark
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Grallina cyanoleuca
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Torresian
Crow
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Corvus orru
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Common
Myna
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Sturnus tristis
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Cockatiel
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Nymphicus hollandicus
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Grey
Butcherbird
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Cracticus torquatus
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Noisy
Miner
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Manorina melanocephala
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Apostlebird
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Struthidea cinerea
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White-winged
Chough
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Corcorax melanorhamphos
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Straw-necked
Ibis
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Threskiornis spinicollis
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Galah
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Eolophus roseicapillus
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Ground
Cuckoo-shrike
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Coracina maxima
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Common
Starling
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Sturnus vulgaris
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Australian
Magpie
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Cracticus tibicen
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Black-shouldered
Kite
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Elanus axillaris
|
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Pale-headed
Rosella
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Platycercus adscitus
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Nankeen
Kestrel
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Falco cenchroides
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Willie
Wagtail
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Rhipidura leucophrys
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Crested
Pigeon
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Ocyphaps lophotes
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White-throated
Treecreeper
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Cormobates leucophaea
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Little
Corella
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Cacatua sanguinea
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Superb
Fairy-wren
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Malurus cyaneus
|
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Rufous
Whistler
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Pachycephala rufiventris
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Galah
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Eolophus roseicapillus
|
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Black-faced
Cuckoo-shrike
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Coracina novaehollandiae
|
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Red-rumped
Parrot
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Psephotus haematonotus
|
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Great
Egret
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Ardea alba
|
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Pied
Butcherbird
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Cracticus nigrogularis
|
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Spiny-cheeked
Honeyeater
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Acanthagenys rufogularis
|
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Shining
Bronze-Cuckoo
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Chalcites lucidus
|
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Yellow-rumped
Thornbill
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Acanthiza chrysorrhoa
|
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Brown
Honeyeater
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Lichmera indistincta
|
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Double-barred
Finch
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Taeniopygia bichenovii
|
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Australian
Raven
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Corvus coronoides
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Red-browed
Finch
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Neochmia temporalis
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Brown
Falcon
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Falco berigora
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Wedge-tailed
Eagle
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Aquila audax
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Striated
Pardalote
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Pardalotus striatus
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Noisy
Friarbird
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Philemon corniculatus
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Sulphur-crested
Cockatoo
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Cacatua galerita
|
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Eastern
Yellow Robin
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Eopsaltria australis
|
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Laughing
Kookaburra
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Dacelo novaeguineae
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White-faced
Heron
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Egretta novaehollandiae
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Eurasian
Coot
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Fulica atra
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Hardhead
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Aythya australis
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Little
Pied Cormorant
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Microcarbo melanoleucos
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Grey
Teal
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Anas gracilis
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Australasian
Grebe
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Tachybaptus novaehollandiae
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Australasian
Darter
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Anhinga novaehollandiae
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Rock
Dove
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Columba livia
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Spotted
Dove
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Streptopelia chinensis
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Olive-backed
Oriole
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Oriolus sagittatus
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Rainbow
Lorikeet
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Trichoglossus haematodus
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