MKinHK
Mike Kilburn

Thanks 3IB! I continue to enjoy getting to grips with the birding here.
Belrose to Narrabeen on the Slippery Dip Trail
26 March 2023

I've been wanting to explore Gadigal National Park for a while, and last Sunday I took a 193 bus from Warringah Mall to the Belrose Uniting Church (1) and started walking down Morgan Avenue to the beginning of the Slippery Dip Trail (2). This first section produced a nice flyover flock of Yellow-tailed Black Cockatoos and a couple of Olive-backed Orioles. On the way I passed a stables with a hidden pond that was doubtless the attraction for 20-odd Maned Ducks, a Magpie-Lark and a couple of pics of Masked Lapwings. I also picked up the softly rippling winter call of a Fat-tailed Cuckoo behind the typically strident notes of the much closer Eastern Whipbird.

The majority of this evocatively-named trail belies its name by running for most of its length along a rather dry sandstone ridge. This is not an especially birdy habitat, but with some of the wattle trees starting to flower I did pick up small numbers of Little and Red Wattlebirds, two Noisy Friarbirds, a couple of Eastern Spinebills and New Holland, Lewin's, White-cheeked and White-eared Honeyeaters. It was the latter that performed the best - with a couple of birds showing nicely at the spot where the title image was taken.

Much of the walk walk however disturbed by the noise of model planes flying from their little airfield at (3), and the trail from there to the high point at (5) was churned up by heavy equipment that had recently replaced the power lines. And somehow the disturbance continued as the track from (50 to (6) turned out to be part of a mountain biking course, complete with jumping ramps and names like Rampage and King Brown Alley. Hmmm. I did find a little more tranquility once I got to Deep Creek and headed east along the creek through some nice forest and flood meadows to (7) where I ran out time and turned round, but not before having great views of a nice adult Brown Cuckoo Dove and damp forest species such as Golden Whistler, Eastern Yellow Robin, and Rufous Fantail. The only other bird of note was a Grey Butcherbird that posed nicely in the park along the edge of Narrabeen Lagoon. Other bits and pieces included 20 Pacific Black Ducks, a Coot and a couple of Dusky Moorhens in the forest pool next to the bridge across the creek, a small group of Little Pied Cormorants hunched in a tree and an Eastern Osprey that flew over the road as I waited for my bus home.

Cheers
Mike
Belrose to Narrabeen on the Slippery Dip Trail
26 March 2023

I've been wanting to explore Gadigal National Park for a while, and last Sunday I took a 193 bus from Warringah Mall to the Belrose Uniting Church (1) and started walking down Morgan Avenue to the beginning of the Slippery Dip Trail (2). This first section produced a nice flyover flock of Yellow-tailed Black Cockatoos and a couple of Olive-backed Orioles. On the way I passed a stables with a hidden pond that was doubtless the attraction for 20-odd Maned Ducks, a Magpie-Lark and a couple of pics of Masked Lapwings. I also picked up the softly rippling winter call of a Fat-tailed Cuckoo behind the typically strident notes of the much closer Eastern Whipbird.

The majority of this evocatively-named trail belies its name by running for most of its length along a rather dry sandstone ridge. This is not an especially birdy habitat, but with some of the wattle trees starting to flower I did pick up small numbers of Little and Red Wattlebirds, two Noisy Friarbirds, a couple of Eastern Spinebills and New Holland, Lewin's, White-cheeked and White-eared Honeyeaters. It was the latter that performed the best - with a couple of birds showing nicely at the spot where the title image was taken.


Much of the walk walk however disturbed by the noise of model planes flying from their little airfield at (3), and the trail from there to the high point at (5) was churned up by heavy equipment that had recently replaced the power lines. And somehow the disturbance continued as the track from (50 to (6) turned out to be part of a mountain biking course, complete with jumping ramps and names like Rampage and King Brown Alley. Hmmm. I did find a little more tranquility once I got to Deep Creek and headed east along the creek through some nice forest and flood meadows to (7) where I ran out time and turned round, but not before having great views of a nice adult Brown Cuckoo Dove and damp forest species such as Golden Whistler, Eastern Yellow Robin, and Rufous Fantail. The only other bird of note was a Grey Butcherbird that posed nicely in the park along the edge of Narrabeen Lagoon. Other bits and pieces included 20 Pacific Black Ducks, a Coot and a couple of Dusky Moorhens in the forest pool next to the bridge across the creek, a small group of Little Pied Cormorants hunched in a tree and an Eastern Osprey that flew over the road as I waited for my bus home.


Cheers
Mike
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