This is the fifth and final post about my trip Western Australia in September 2017. In addition I initially uploaded a post about our visit to Christmas Island.
The post covers the last two and a half days based in Kununurra where visited areas close to the town, Lake Argyle and the outskirts of Wyndham.

On the first morning in the Kununurra area we took a boat trip on Lake Argyle. Compared to the birding we had been doing onshore, it was relaxing and cool. A most pleasant experience. Lake Argyle is a man-made reservoir a short distance from the town and is one of the largest bodies of freshwater in Australia.

We expected to see Little Pied Cormorants …

… and Australian Darters …

…. but were not expecting a Black Bittern, a species normally confined to dense waterside vegetation and not rocky slopes.

The shallow, vegetated areas were full of birds: Magpie Geese, Wandering Whistling Duck, Glossy Ibis, Pied Heron and Intermediate Egret in this photo alone.

The boat took us near an island where a pair of Black-necked Storks were nesting.

The male (identified by its dark iris) was on the nest ….

…. and hunkered down as we passed.

The female, with a yellow iris, was feeding nearby.

In the waterside vegetation we had good views of a Baillon’s Crake (a bird that occurs in Europe and may even have bred in Britain, but is normally very hard to see) …

… and the rather more showy White-browed Crake, which occurs in much of SE Asia, New Guinea, northern Australia and some Pacific islands.

Comb-crested Jacanas showed off their combs …

…. whilst White-breasted Woodswallows collected nesting material.

We had close up views of a Freshwater Crocodile devouring a catfish.

We moored up by a low-lying island and waded ashore, fortunately there were no crocodiles here! (I know Alison is wading in the wrong direction, but if I’d have taken the shot as we disembarked rather than when we got back, all I’d have photographed was backs).

The bays were full of birds, more Magpie Geese …

… Grey Teal …

… and Rajah Shelduck.

We circumnavigated the island seeing many birds …

… ranging from the now familiar White-headed Stilts and Pied Herons …

… and Australian Pelicans …

… to the more seldom seen Australian Pratincole …

… and Sharp-tailed Sandpipers, a migrant from Siberia.

Overhead we saw White-bellied Sea-eagles …

… but our main quarry was Yellow Chat, a rare and restricted range species that is actually a honeyeater and not a chat, like say, the Old World Stonechat.

They were quite furtive and hard to approach but I did capture the striking black band on the chest (even if it was partially hidden by a twig).

Suddenly we came across a group of 58 pigeons feeding in front of us. They were directly into the sun and very flighty. Scope views yielded what I had hardly dared hope for, Flock Bronzewings, a nomadic and elusive pigeon of the northern interior, here at the very edge of its range. My photos show little more than bumps on the ground so …

On our way back we saw the much more sedentary, but range restricted White-quilled Rock Pigeon. Known only from the Kimberley region, we also saw this bird on the Mitchell Plateau (see previous post).

We also had very close views of Short-eared Rock Wallaby.

Any closer and I would have been unable to focus!

Around Kununurra there are large areas of cultivation crisscrossed by canals used for irrigation. This area is very attractive to finches and we spent much of the afternoon searching for species like Crimson Finch …

… Chestnut-breasted (four birds) and Yellow-rumped (2nd from bottom on the left) Manikins.

We also saw Zebra Finches …

… and the lovely Star Finch.

Several Spotted Harriers circled over the fields.

During our time at Kununurra we paid a couple of visits to the ponds and woodland near the golf course seeing many birds like this Yellow Oriole …

… Fairy Martin …

… Sacred Kingfisher …

… White-winged Triller (a species of cuckooshrike) …

… and two species of cuckoo, Brush Cuckoo …

… and Pallid Cuckoo.

Some populations of Dollarbird (a species of roller named after the pale circles or ‘silver dollars’ in its wings) breed in Australia, others are migratory arriving from as far north as Japan.

On the ponds we had good views of Australasian Grebes …

… Dusky Moorhens …

… the enormous Australasian Swamphen …

… and the trips only Green Pygmy Geese.

Our late afternoon at the golf course ended with a spectacular sunset.

The following morning we set off early for Wyndham, a former gold rush town on the coast to the north of Kununurra. The area has quite a high indigenous population which is commemorated by these giant statues of an aboriginal family.

We headed for a campsite where a riverbed usually has a number of pools where birds come to drink. Whilst waiting we saw a spectacular dawn flight of many hundred Little Corellas leaving their roost.

We saw many birds in the area ranging from the ubiquitous Willie Wagtail (a species of fantail) to a Pacific Swift which Andy declared to be probably be ‘the first to be recorded in the whole of Australia that spring’, having flown all the way from north-east Asia to escape the northern winter.

The pools in the riverbed had dried up but people at the campsite had filled up metal containers for the birds to drink from. We had cracking views of Double-barred Finches …

… and Rufous-throated Honeyeaters (this was one of the very few individuals that actually sported a rufous throat).

In this photo we can see (L-R) two Double-barred Finches, a Long-tailed Finch, a Striated Pardalote and a Masked Finch.

As the mercury rose we were obliged to get out of the open. Fortunately there was some shade by the camp site shop where a Straw-necked Ibis strolled round in the open (note the straw-like feathers on the lower neck).

We were lucky that the staff had placed some drinking containers outside the shop and as the temperature rose to over 37 degrees a steady stream of birds came in to quench their thirsts. Here is a Peaceful Dove …

… and here a Bar-shouldered Dove.

Other visitors included Little Friarbird …

… a Silver-crowned Friarbird …

… the inevitable Magpie-lark …

… Blue-faced Honeyeater …

… Bar-breasted Honeyeater …

… Yellow-tinted Honeyeater …

… and the rather drab Olive-backed Oriole.
If there was one bird I really wanted to see in the Kununurra/Wyndham area it was the exquisite Gouldian Finch, named after by ornithologist John Gould after his wife Elizabeth. These drinking bowls were our best chance but we also visited an area where some nest boxes had been put up for them. It was my turn in the front seat of the lead vehicle and as we arrived I caught a glimpse of four finches in flight with a strikingly banded underparts. These may have been Gouldian Finches but no-one else saw them well and we will never know for sure. Later back at the camp site we waited and waited ….

… what we hoped for was this …. (photo was taken from the factzoo.com website)

… what we eventually got was this – a very plain juvenile Gouldian (sorry to include a photo of captive individuals in the previous photo, but it does show the three different colour morphs). This juvenile proved to be the ‘disappointment of the tour’, ok I got the tick but I didn’t get the ‘value’. It was a was a shame to end the tour on this note, but hey, there’s a good reason to come back!

That wasn’t quite the end of the tour, the following morning we had time to check some woodland by this ford where we found the last new bird of the tour – a Shining Flycatcher.
From here we drove to the airport and said goodbye to Andy and Stuart who had to drive the hire cars all the way back to Broome. This time they took the longer (1000km) but faster tarmacked road that lies to south of the Kimberley. The rest of us flew home by various routes. Most went back to Perth before flying on to Europe but I went the other way on to Darwin.
My original route was: Kununurra – Darwin – KL – Heathrow; which was a lot more direct than going back to Perth. However I later found that Malaysian Airlines had ceased to offer the Darwin – KL flight so I was routed: Kununurra – Darwin – Melbourne – Dubai – Heathrow; a much longer journey which took the best part of three days!

At least staying overnight at a very hot and humid Darwin allowed me to see a few more birds like this rather tame Orange-footed Scrubfowl.

The onward flight to Melbourne took me across the entire continent from north to south.

Much of the flight was over the Red Centre …

… and afforded spectacular views of the desert …

… and as we approached Melbourne the view changed to one dominated by agriculture.
The tour of both southwestern and northwestern Australia plus Christmas Island had been excellent. I personally recorded 377 species and had seen about 50 life birds. There are still several areas of Australia that I wish to visit and I hope to be back there before too long.
This is the fourth (of five) blog posts about my tour of Western Australia, in addition there is a post on Christmas Island which was offered as a pre-tour extension.
The post covers our journey along the Gibb River Road from the town of Derby (close to Broome) to Kununurra near the state border with the Northern Territory.

As I mentioned before all of the journey was on dirt roads, this was particularly tricky if you were in the second vehicle and were driving into the sun (as we were driving to the north-east this occurred in the morning).

Guess which vehicle was in the lead and which was following!

We had spent much of the morning birding in the Derby area so the afternoon was taken up with the long drive to Mt Elizabeth Station. We arrived at 1700 so there was only a short time to had time for bird around the guest chalets, but we did see a number of Agile Wallabies ….

…. and Black-faced Woodswallows.

The following morning near the Station we saw our first Silver-backed Butcherbirds. Formerly lumped with Grey Butcherbird which replaces it to the south, this species is actually more closely related to Black-backed Butcherbird of New Guinea and the Australia’s Cape York Peninsula.

We birded along the Gibb River Road the following morning and then turned north on the Gibb River-Kalumburu Road. We arrived at our accommodation at Drysdale River Station mid-afternoon (a ranch of a mere million acres) but didn’t stay long as we had some birding to do at a nearby billabong ….

…. but the sign that greeted us as we left didn’t fill us with confidence!

The partially dried up river bed (or billabong ) was a great place to bird.

The water levels were low but marks on a tree by the river bed reminded up of just how high the flood water can reach.

The area was home to several species of kingfisher, Sacred ….

…. and the diminutive Azure.

Also during our travels in the north we came across a number of the enormous Blue-winged Kookaburras, one of the largest kingfishers in Australia.

Along the edge of the billabong we saw some Paperbark Flycatchers, a recent split from Restless Flycatcher and named after the paperbark trees of the northern woodlands.

Our main target was the exquisite Purple-crowned Fairy-wren a declining species that has become quite hard to find in recent years.

Crimson Finches …

… and Double-barred Finches enlivened the proceedings.

We stayed on till dusk …

…. and not only saw but were able to photograph a restless pair of Barking Owls.

The following day was one of the most exciting of the whole tour. We had been warned from the outset that there would be a very early start, but even so the announcement of a 0100 departure was a bit of a shock. We headed northwards bumping along the Gibbs River-Kalumburu Road in the dark. A few of the grou saw Spotted Nightjar on route and we all saw a female Bush Stone-curlew with two chicks in the middle of the track that she tried protect by hiding them under her wings. We arrived at the remote Mitchell Plateau just after 0500. I say remote, but there was a well-developed campsite and a helicopter service that took tourists to see a nearby waterfall. The area can become very hot and we were warned that we must not wander off on our own (as has happened in the past), drink lots of water and protect our skin. To get to this rocky outcrop was a bit of a scramble …

… but soon we reached level ground which afforded great views over the surrounding forest.

Our target birds fell one by one, the restricted range White-quilled Rock Pigeon …

… Kimberley Honeyeater, which is endemic to the Kimberley region …

… and the more widespread Sandstone Shrikethrush.

But the outstanding sighting, indeed the main reason for making the long drive through the night, was to see the diminutive and elusive Black Grasswren. The eleven species of grasswren (related to the fairy-wrens) are some of the most skulking of Australia’s birds, usually only affording brief views as they scuttle through the undergrowth. Most trips to the Mitchell Plateau just glimpse the bird as it runs from one rock to another but we had a pair out in the open singing and we saw it well long before the area heated up to it’s 40 plus degree norm.

Even the leader Andy, who had made this trip several times, had never seen them so well. It was not surprising that this was unanimously voted ‘bird of the trip’.

We spent a while overlooking the lake and scanning the distant horizon and saw some distant displaying Pacific Bazas and a number of cockatoos, but with all species except Partridge Pigeon (which I have seen before in NT) under the belt we left by 1020, hours earlier than on most previous tours.

The early return gave us plenty of chances to stop and bird on the way back. Rainbow Bee-eaters showed well …

… as did this singing Leaden Flycatcher.

White-throated Honeyeaters were no big surprise …

… but this was! We walked an area of dry eucalypt forest in the hope we might flush a Chestnut-backed Buttonquail. We didn’t flush a single one – but we found a group of six feeding out in the open. So good were the views of this normally mega elusive species (well mega-elusive family to be more precise) that it got voted number two ‘bird of the trip’.

We were back at Drysdale River Station by mid-afternoon. Some opted to rest after the extremely early start but the rest of us returned to the billabong where we saw much the same as the afternoon before.

One species we didn’t want to see was the infamous cane toad. The introduction of these toads to Australia has been described as the worst decision in the country’s history. Cane toads, native to the Neotropics were introduced to coastal Queensland in 1935 to control the native cane beetle which was damaging sugar cane production. Cane Toad numbers now exceed 200 million and have spread as far west as the Kimberley. They have failed to control cane beetles but due to their poisonous neck glands, which can clearly be seen in the photo, they have almost wiped out native predators like quolls, goannas and snakes and have killed many cats and dogs plus some humans who have inadvertently come into contact with their poison. They predate many smaller species and compete with others for food supplies. By killing goannas the number of crocodiles has risen due to reduced predation of their eggs and a huge decrease in dung beetles due to the toad has resulted in a massive increase in cow dung which may lead to disease outbreaks in cattle. They are a classic example of the folly of introducing a predator into a region where the native wildlife has no natural defense against them.

So it was back to the chalets at Drysdale Station and an early night to catch up on sleep.

We heard from the staff at Drysdale Station that there were some recently arrived Oriental Plovers on their airstrip.

We also found a very dark falcon. Hopes that it was the rare Black Falcon (which would be a lifer for me) were soon squashed and it proved to be a dark example of the much commoner Brown Falcon.

The drive through the desert scrub was long and at times uncomfortable, but who would have expected a sign advertising scones, jam and cream out in this wilderness!

This area was populated with a number of boab trees, the name an Australian contraction of the African name baobab. This genus (of nine species) is found only in Africa and in particular in Madagascar. Probably evolved too recently to be a Gondwanaland relict, the species probably reached Australia as seeds in rafts of vegetation carried on sea currents.

More birds were seen on our journey, Sulphur-crested Cockatoos ….

…. and Red-tailed Black Cockatoos,, a bird that looks very like a Black Kite in flight.

A distant Brolga, a species of crane that largely avoided the photographers on this tour, was seen in this creek.

Here we found a group of Pictorella Mannikins, a new bird for me although they were hard to photograph well in the heat haze and glaring light.

Hardly surprisingly given the rough road conditions, we had a puncture. We then realised that sharp shale fragments had been used as a road dressing and this had caused the flat. We met several other vehicles all with the same problem along this stretch.

A river crossing had a few pools along its edge, home to this group of Magpie Geese. This species is so different from all other wildfowl that it’s in its own family.

Also by the river were a number of the gorgeous Spinifex Pigeons. This made it as number three ‘bird of the trip’ even surpassing the amazing Noisy Scrub-bird by one point.

Eventually we reached an open area with views across the Pentecost River flood plain towards Kununurra …

… and another hour or so of dirt road driving got us to the tarmac on the Wyndham – Kununurra highway, a route that will take you all the way to Katherine in the Northern territory if you wish.
We arrived at Kununurra just after dark for a three night stay. The past four days had been a bit tough on hot, dusty and bumpy roads (but I’ve known worse) but we had traversed some real wilderness and seen some great birds.
Our time around Kununurra, Lake Argyle and Wyndam will be the subject of the final post in this series.
This is the third post about mainland Western Australia (the fourth if you include Christmas Island) and deals with the area around the town of Broome on the northwest coast.
We flew from Perth at 0700 and arrived at Broome at 0920 and after collecting the vehicles and dropping baggage off at the hotel we were straight out birding (well we were hardly going to rest in the shade with so many top quality birds to see!).

The flight from Perth to Broome took us over some amazing desert scenery which helped pass the time.

We arrived at Broome mid morning ….

…. and after collecting the 4×4 cars and meeting Stuart who was to be be second leader and second driver on this section of the tour, we made a quick visit to the hotel to drop off our gear ….

….. and headed down to a jetty in the mangroves.

…. a site of local historic importance as the pearl lugger fleet used to disembark and unload here.

There were plenty of Fiddler Crabs on the mud below us but the birds tended to be elusive in the 35 degree late morning heat.

However at a nearby overflow pipe Red-headed Myzomelas, a tiny species of honeyeater, arrived for a drink.

Magpie-larks were common throughout the town ….

….and we had a real treat when we scanned a cricket pitch in the town centre, a group of eight Oriental Plovers fresh in from Mongolia were giving excellent views.

This enigmatic species can be hard to find but I have been lucky to see this species on two previous trips (Java and Australia’s Northern Territory) and saw it at three locations on this trip, but I have never encountered it in its gorgeous breeding plumage. However I will be visiting Mongolia in May this year so should catch up with that plumage at long last.

Also on the pitch were a number of resident Masked Lapwings.

We spent some time at the water treatment works where an elevated platform had been erected to let you watch the birds. There were many species here, ducks, waders, terns and these Australian Pelicans.

Among the many birds we saw were Royal Spoonbill ….

…. and Australasian Grebe.

Later that afternoon we visited nearby mangroves and walked along the sandy beach ….

…. and admired the rocks carved into bizarre shapes by wind and water.

Our main target here was the ‘Kimberley Flyrobin’, a very plain race of Lemon-bellied Flyrobin that was once treated as a separate species. The two subspecies group look different, occupy different habitats and are allopatric so there is no gene flow between them. The Handbook of the Birds of the World ‘Illustrated Checklist’ treats them as full species, its a shame IOC doesn’t as well.

Other mangrove species we saw in the area were Mangrove Fantail ….

…. White-breasted Whistler ….

…. and Dusky Gerygone, a species of Australian warbler.

We were back in a nearby area the following morning but our main targets were now waders (or shorebirds as they are known in North America).

A few White-headed Stilts were seen along the tide line. This species/race is found throughout Australasia. If we exclude the very different Banded Stilt of southern Australia and the similar but all-black Black Stilt of New Zealand, we are left, worldwide, with four stilt ‘species’; White-headed, White-backed, Black-winged and Black-headed, all of which differ only in the exact distribution of black and white on the head, neck and back. In the contrary situation to the Kimberley Flyrobin, IOC splits them all and HBW lumps them all. Obviously I like the idea of having the extra life birds on my list, but in reality I think the days of having four ‘pied stilt’ species are numbered.

The vast majority of the waders (or shorebirds if you are from North America) were very distant but as the tide rose we headed back along the track ….

…. to a number of lookouts where we could scope them (note the wader flocks along the shoreline, especially behind the grass).

…. although any attempt to get closer just resulted in flushing them. In this photo a few Black-tailed Godwits, tattlers and others can be seen in flight but the majority are Great Knots with a few Red-necked Stints in the foreground.

However in a few locations we could at least photograph the flock, if not individual birds. Great Knots predominate in this photo as well. There is one still in partial summer plumage at about 10 o’clock to the centre. Like many of the species present, Great Knots breed on the tundra of eastern Siberia and winter in Australia.

This photo shows mainly Red-necked Stints, plus a few Curlew Sandpipers and sand plovers.

And there’s more! Greater and Lesser Sand Plovers, Curlew Sandpipers, Red-necked Stints and a few Terek Sandpipers are illustrated here.

A lot of Grey-tailed Tattlers, plus a few Black-tailed Godwits and Turnstones were roosting on the rocks, and a Pacific Reef Egret is taking shelter from the ferocious sun ….

…. as was this Great Egret.

On this sand spit smaller waders are joined by the odd Whimbrel, Greenshank and Bar-tailed Godwit. Also in the photo are a number of Gull-billed (or gullible as I like to call them) Terns. These are interesting, as the HBW Illustrated Checklist treats the Australian population macrotarsa as a separate species based on its larger size, differently shaped bill and nomadic and kleptoparasitic behaviour.

Also in the high tide roosts were a number of Crested Terns, Silver Gulls ….

…. and the odd White-faced Heron.
The roosts at Broome are one of the great wader gatherings in the world. Destruction of coastal wetlands in Korea and China has led to a marked reduction of the population of some species (most notably Far-eastern Curlew and Little Curlew of which we only saw fifteen and one respectively) and the general opinion was that we were too early and there were still enormous numbers of birds still to arrive. That said, our estimate of wader numbers in Broome area was amazing and an estimate of numbers is given below: (an asterisk indicates that the species was mainly seen away from the high tide wader roosts).
Bush Stone Curlew* 1
Pied Oystercatcher* 10
Sooty Oystercatcher* 4
White headed Stilt* 1
Masked Lapwing* 10
Red-kneed Dotterel* 2
Pacific Golden Plover 50
Grey Plover 80
Red-capped Plover* 10
Lesser Sand Plover 1000
Greater Sand Plover 500
Oriental Plover* 8
Black fronted Dotterel* 5
Black-tailed Godwit 50
Bar-tailed-Godwit 800
Little Curlew 1
Far Eastern Curlew 15
Whimbrel 30
Marsh Sandpiper* 2
Greenshank 500
Common Redshank 4
Wood Sandpiper* 1
Grey-tailed Tattler 200
Terek Sandpiper 200
Common Sandpiper 12
Ruddy Turnstone 30
Great Knot 10,000
Red Knot 5
Broad-billed Sandpiper 3
Sharp-tailed Sandpiper* 10
Curlew Sandpiper 200
Red-necked Stint 1000

Back at the hotel for lunch and a chance to scan over the mangroves and see birds like

…. Brahiminy Kite ….

…. and White-bellied Sea-eagle.

During the afternoon we watched a number of roadside pools which was surprisingly successful with a nice range of species like Red-winged Parrot ….

…. Red-tailed Black Cockatoo (the red panel in the tail can just be seen on the foremost bird) ….

…. and Great Bowerbird, although this individual looks more interested in collecting pebbles to decorate its bower than coming for a drink).

Dabbling around the edge around was a trio of Pink-eared Ducks. You have to look hard to see the ‘pink ears’ but can just make out a small pink area behind the dark surround to the eye.

On the 21st we packed up and left Broome and drove towards Derby (a town that is presumably named after the British city where I spent much of my teenage years.). On route we saw our only flock of Budgies.

Seeing wild Budgerigars is always a high on the wish-list of any birder visiting Australia, but the species is nomadic, travelling from one area that has had rainfall to the next and the flocks are restless and not prone to posing for photos.

Whistling Kites were quite common (primary moult in this individual gives it an unusual outline) ….

…. and at a river crossing we saw the magnificent Black-necked Stork ….

…. the equally magnificent Australian Bustard ….

…. and the more mundane Intermediate Egret.

Other species seen on route included the delightful and diminutive Diamond Dove ….

…. the ubiquitous Magpie-lark (a relative of the monarch flycatchers and not either a magpie or a lark) ….

…. and another common bird, Torresian Crow, which replaces Australian Raven, Little Raven and Little Crow in the north.

Yellow-throated Miners (a species of honeyeater) ….

…. and Little Corellas also kept us company.

In due course we reached Derby, had a very late breakfast and then headed west along the Gibb River Road. We weren’t far out of the town when we ran out of tarmac.

We wouldn’t see a paved road again (apart from a few short stretches over bridges) until we were almost at Kununurra in three days time. It was a given, especially for those in the second vehicle, to be enveloped in dust at all times. Note the radio aerial on the left of the bonnet has snapped of from all the vibration.

Our drive across the Kimberley region will be the subject of the next post, however I like to end with an eye-catching shot (mainly because Facebook has stopped selecting a photo at random and now choses the last one to head up a post). This sunset was photographed at the rocky beach at Broome where we visited the on the first day to look for Kimberley Flyrobin.
This is the second post about my trip to Western Australia. The first post detailed the pre-tour extension to Christmas Island, this post covers our journey from Perth to Albany.
I have made two previous private trips to Australia, concentrating on the east, north and centre of the country. On this occasion I decided to travel with Birdquest due to their comprehensive coverage of the state of Western Australia.

After the tranquility of Christmas Island, Perth’s freeways, traffic, high-rise buildings ….

…. and multi-lane underpasses came as a bit of a shock. Two more clients, Alison and Brian (who had accompanied me on two previous trips) joined us for the main tour.

Our first stop was Herdman’s Lake, a lovely wetland reserve within the city limits. we arrived just as the sun was rising ….

….. silhouetting the Great Cormorants hanging their wings out to dry.

There were plenty of waterfowl on the lake, the common Pacific Black Duck ….

…. the bizarre Musk Duck, the male of which has a huge black dewlap under the bill ….

…. the aptly named Blue-billed Duck ….

…. the rather shy Pink-eared Duck …..

….. and the inevitable Black Swans and cygnets.

Other waterbirds included Australian Darter ….

…. Yellow-billed Spoonbill ….

…. White Ibis ….

…. and a juvenile Nankeen Night Heron nicely showing off its spots.

Australian Purple Swamphens fed on the verges completely oblivious to the joggers and cyclists passing by.

Buff-banded Rails are far more retiring but high water levels had forced them out of the reeds allowing good views.

Great Crested Grebes looked quite like the ones back home, if a little darker, however they do not go into winter plumage leading some to consider that they may represent a separate species.

The lakeside reeds held Australian Reed-warbler, formerly considered a race of Clamorous Reed-warbler, now split as a separate species.

In the eucalyptus we found a Magpie-lark on the nest

As well as a nesting Tawny Frogmouth. Frogmouths are a nocturnal essentially SE Asian family that have spread to Australia where three species occur. Tawny Frogmouth is by far the commonest and most widespread of the three.

With plenty more places to visit we left the lakeside and returned to where we had left the minibus ….

…. but we found to our dismay that the window of the sliding door had been smashed (see the broken glass in the doorway). Fortunately no suitcases had been taken but some of the other clients lost hand luggage containing cameras, clothes, credit cards etc. Reporting this to the police, getting a replacement minibus and all the associated paperwork took us the rest of the morning. This is only the second time that such a break in has occurred in Birdquest’s history so we were pretty unlucky to have it happen to us.

We set off for the Dryandra Forest on route we saw a few Laughing Kookaburras. This is such a well know Aussie bird that it came as a bit of a shock to find out that they are an introduced species in Western Australia.

Other additions to the list included this Grey Currawong ….

…. and Ringnecked Parrot of the so-called ’28’ race.

We had a bit of time in Dryandra Forest before dusk ….

…. and after dinner we returned for a bit of spotlighting. It was quite windy and surprisingly cold, not the best conditions for night birds. and the only species seen was Tawny Frogmouth (which we had seen so well in daylight that morning). Of the mammals, we had hoped to see the rare Numbat but drew a blank, I had a brief view of a Southern Brown Bandicoot but the only mammal that stuck around was this Common Brushtail Possum with a baby clinging to its back.

We were back in a chilly Dryandra Forest early the next morning.

Yellow-plumed Honeyeaters were abundant ….

….cute Dusky Woodswallows were seen in the trees or in flight ….

…. and we had great views of Rufous Treecreepers. This species is perhaps the least arboreal of all the Australian treecreepers and is often seen foraging in the leaf litter.

We also saw Western Whistler, a recent split from the widespread Golden Whistler.

Mammal interest was provided by a few Western Grey Kangaroos.

We moved on to the Sterling Ranges ….

…. stopping on route at a lagoon where we had great views of the range restricted Hooded Plover, a bird I have only previously seen in Tasmania.

And here we saw our first Wedge-tailed Eagles of the trip.

We arrived at our accommodation in the Sterling Ranges in the afternoon and soon tracked down some goodies like ….

…. the aptly named Splendid Fairy-wren ….

…. and another bird which lived up to its name, Little Eagle ….

…. being little bigger than a Buzzard. There was a pair nesting nearby and we were to see them regularly whilst in the area. Whilst I have never had problems in seeing Little Eagle the same cannot be said for its New Guinea counterpart Pygmy Eagle (with which it was formerly lumped), even after three visit to New Guinea I drew a blank on that one.

The following morning was bitterly cold, just above freezing and with a strong wind. I realised that I hadn’t brought enough warm clothing when the others started donning down jackets and ski gloves. Our target on the road to Mount Trio ….

…. was the mega-skulking Western Whipbird. Although easy to hear they can be a devil to see and I was delighted when one popped into view and I was even more delighted once I had thawed out.

Around the swimming pool at our accommodation we found a Southern Scrub-robin, a species that was completely off my radar as it had never been seen on this tour before. Only in Australia would you expect to see a sign like this ….

…. or a product with this name in the local shop!

The following morning was even colder and we had to scrape ice off the minibus before we could leave, however there was no wind and it soon warmed up. Not far from the Sterling Ranges we came across a large flock of hundreds of ‘white-tailed cockatoos’ (this is just part of a much larger gathering).

Closer examination showed that the flock consisted of two species, Baudin’s and Carnaby’s Cockatoos ….

Although very similar, differing only in the length of the bill, they are undoubtedly good species, feeding on different fruits and invariably pairing with their own kind. This pair (the dusky-billed bird on the left is a male) are the longer-billed Baudin’s)

Whilst this is most likely the short-billed Carnaby’s but unless the bill is open it is hard to be sure.

Later on as we drove ever further south towards Albany we found the localized Western Rosella.

On arrival at our motel in Albany we saw another south-western speciality, Western Rosella feeding in the grounds, this is a female ….

…. and here is the brighter male.
The next post will cover the rest of our birding in the Albany area and then our journey inland to the Outback before returning to Perth.