Archive for November, 2006

Time for a bath: visitors to our bird bath

Brown-headed Honeyeater

Brown-headed Honeyeater

Some years ago we set up a birdbath on our patio area. It gave us much pleasure to see birds coming to drink and bathe. More recently we moved it to the other side of the house. Now it is in full view from our sunroom. It is here we often eat our meals, and work at the table with the birdbath in full view.

Over recent years, this location has had four main benefits:

  1. It is a great time waster investment; watching the birds go about their daily lives just a few metres from where we are sitting is both relaxing and refreshing to the body, mind and spirit.
  2. It is most entertaining, especially when a bird like a Mallee Ringneck Parrot comes to bathe and the water sprays in all directions.
  3. It is excellent for photography; with the 12X zoom on my camera, I have taken many close-up shots of the birds visiting. (Update: my new camera has a 20x zoom. Further update: I now have a camera with an 83x zoom.)
  4. It is educational; our human visitors marvel at our avian visitors and this gives us the opportunity to further enhance our friends’ appreciation of the natural environment.
White-plumed Honeyeater

White-plumed Honeyeater

I’ve actually installed three different baths in close proximity to one another; one on the ground (which the lizards sometimes use too), one at a height of about 60cm and the third at about 1.5m. This gives them choices. The nearby branches and bushes give them a place of refuge if they feel threatened in any way.

House Sparrow (male)

House Sparrow (male)

A List of Species that have visited our bird baths:

  • Mallee Ringneck Parrot
  • New Holland Honeyeater
  • Spiny-cheeked Honeyeater
  • Red Wattlebird
  • Brown-headed Honeyeater
  • Singing Honeyeater
  • White-plumed Honeyeater
  • House Sparrow
  • Common Starling
  • Little Raven
  • Willie Wagtail
  • Spotted Turtledove
  • Crested Pigeon
  • Spotted Pardalote
  • Striated Pardalote
  • Diamond Firetail Finch
  • Yellow-rumped Thornbill
  • Grey Shrike-thrush
  • Australian Magpie
  • Magpie Lark
  • Mistletoebird
  • Common Blackbird
  • Rufous Whistler (see updates below)
  • European Goldfinch (see updates below)
  • Chestnut-rumped Thornbill (see updates below)
  • Grey Fantail (see updates below)
  • Black-faced Cuckoo-shrike (see updates below)
  • Galah (see updates below)
  • Grey Currawong (see updates below)
  • Eastern Rosella (see updates below)
  • Sacred Kingfisher (see updates below)
  • Dusky Woodswallow (see updates below)
  • White-browed Babblers (see updates below)
  • White-winged Chough (see updates below)
  • White-browed Woodswallow (see updates below)
  • Purple-crowned Lorikeet (see updates below)
  • Animals
  • Red Fox
  • Stumpy-tailed Lizard
  • European Rabbit
  • Brown Snake
  • Blue-tongue Lizard

That’s quite a list!

UPDATE: More recently we have added the following species to the list:

  • Rufous Whistler
  • European Goldfinch
  • Chestnut-rumped Thornbill

UPDATE #2 Two more species to add to the list:

  • Stumpy-tail Lizard (also called a Shingleback Lizard)
  • Red Fox – yes, that’s right, a fox.
  • Brown Snake – passed close to the bird bath on the ground. In January 2016 a metre long Brown Snake actually stopped to have a drink. See photos here.

UPDATE #3 Another species to add to the list: Grey Fantail – it came to the bird bath briefly but left before I could take a photograph (4th May, 2007)

UPDATE #4 In January 2008 we had a single Black-faced Cuckoo-shrike come to drink briefly from the bird bath.

UPDATE #5 In late January 2008 a single Galah came to within a metre of the bird bath but did not drink. A few weeks later I added Grey Currawong to the list.

UPDATE #6 In December 2008 I added European Rabbit to the list.

UPDATE #7 In December 2009 I added Eastern Rosella. (Click here for a photo)

UPDATE #8 In November 2013 a Sacred Kingfisher perched about a metre from the bird bath but did not drink. In February 2014 a Dusky Woodswallow came to drink during one of our heat waves during a very hot summer.

UPDATE #9  In September 2015 I added White-winged Chough, White-browed Babbler and Blue-tongue Lizard (click for photo)

UPDATE #10 In December 2015, during a heatwave, I added White-browed Woodswallow.

UPDATE #11 In December 2020 I added Purple-crowned Lorikeet.

Comments: many of my readers have commented on this post – read them below and leave one of your own.

Update: this post was last updated on December 2020.

Mallee Ringneck Parrot

Mallee Ringneck Parrot

Mallee Ringneck Parrot

Mallee Ringneck Parrot

Mallee Ringneck Parrot

Mallee Ringneck Parrot

Bird Word: Belly

  • Belly: the lower underpart of the body of a bird down to where the tail feathers start.

White is a common feature of so many of our birds. Almost as common is the use of ‘white’ in the descriptive common name given to some species. The White-Bellied Sea-Eagle (see photo below) is one such bird. The belly is the part one often sees most clearly as this species soars or glides overhead. Often it is the only part you see as you get a fleeting glimpse of this beautiful bird.

The colour of the belly can assist the birder in the identification process. Other species where the belly colour can be helpful are the White Fronted Chat, the White Fronted Honeyeater, the Lemon-Bellied Flycatcher, the White-Bellied Cuckoo-Shrike. Another species where the belly colour is important is the Orange-Bellied Parrot, though I couldn’t really say because I haven’t actually seen this one yet.

For more in this series of articles check out the Glossary of Bird Words here.

White-Bellied Sea-Eagle

White-Bellied Sea-Eagle

What is a bird atlas?

This is #20 in a series of frequently asked questions about birding.

What is a Bird Atlas?

  • A bird atlas is usually in book form and consists of many maps of a given region, state or country, usually one map for every species found in the particular area covered by the atlas.
  • Each map has parts shaded in showing the distribution of that species in that region.
  • Many field guides have simplified maps showing the distribution of each species.
  • A bird atlas may also show other factors, things like areas where each bird is found breeding, how distribution has changed historically, population densities, vegetation distribution, rainfall and topography. All these factors can influence the presence of birds in particular zones.
  • In Australia there have been several atlases of bird distribution published.
  • I have personally contributed over a thousand reports in total to four of them, two in the Adelaide region of South Australia, and two nation-wide atlases of bird distribution.
  • I found this to be a very satisfying pursuit and my contribution towards conserving our wonderful birds.
  • The latest one, the New Atlas of Australian Birds is ongoing in its data collection.
  • More information, including how to be a contributor, can be found at the Birds Australia website. You can even submit your records electronically via the internet.

Relevant links: