I often walk around my area looking to see what new birds may be passing through. I can find up to 35 species in my area – I back onto a creek (officially a storm water canal) that has been revegetated with native planting and this has had the effect of bringing in more birds to the area…there is quite a list building.
-
- Follow The Gap Year and Beyond on WordPress.com
Top Posts & Pages
-
Recent Posts
- Winter antics in the flowering gums
- An Australian Painted Snipe or two, Lifer 354
- Painted Buttonquail, Lifer 353
- Superb Parrot, Lifer 352
- Eastern Reef Egret, Lifer 351
- Dinosaur in the trees
- Ignorance is bliss
- Feathering a nest
- Mr and Mrs Bronzewing step out
- Leptograpsus and Leptopius
- A Juvenile Storm Bird
- Warning calls, take the hint
- Gippsland Water-dragon
- Cabbage-tree Palms, a nest and a monarch
- Bright bird, hidden home.
Recent Comments
Categories
Archives
Tags
ACDC Lane Australia Australian Birds Australian Pelican Bassian Thrush Bird Photography Black and white Black Swan Braeside Park Brown Falcon Brown Thornbill Crimson Rosella Duckboard Place Eastern Yellow Robin Elster Creek Elsternwick Lake Elwood Elwood Beach graffiti Great Egret Greens Bush Grey Fantail Grey Kangaroo Hosier Lane Jawbone Flora and Fauna Reserve Little Pied Cormorant Little Wattlebird Mallacoota Melbourne CBD Melbourne Laneways Moorooduc Quarry Moorooduc Quarry Flora and Fauna Reserve Mornington Peninsula Mornington Peninsula National Park Nature Photography New Holland Honeyeater Photography Pooh Farm Rainbow Lorikeet Rutledge Lane Spotted Pardalote Street Art Street Photography Sulphur Crested Cockatoo Superb Fairy Wren Tawny Frogmouth Urban Photography Victoria Werribee Western Treatment Plant




