Archive for the 'Magpies and Currawongs' Category

First birds for 2010

I was a little slow off the mark this morning. And it wasn’t because of overindulgent  celebrations the night before.

These days I’m just happy to see in a new morning when I wake; seeing in a New Year means staying up to some ridiculous hour of the night!

I managed to emerge from the cocoon of sleep eventually. I showered, shaved and prepared to have breakfast. As I was getting the daily newspaper from the driveway I realised that it was indeed a New Year.

Mmmm… what was the first bird I saw this morning? Nothing sprang to mind.

My musing was rudely interrupted by a great kerfuffle in the orchard. Aha – my first birds for 2010 were four Australian Magpies and 14 White-winged Choughs having a right royal barney under a pear tree. (Despite the recently departed Christmas season there was NOT a partridge in the pear tree, but we did see two turtledoves later in the morning.)

The resident magpies were objecting quite vociferously to the Gang of Fourteen (the White-winged Choughs) feeding on THEIR PATCH. The racket thoroughly disturbed the peacefulness of this lovely new year.

After a few minutes of conflict in Bird World War, the choughs flew off in a huff.

Peace on Earth and goodwill between birds.

HAPPY NEW YEAR and HAPPY BIRDING in 2010.

White-winged Choughs

White-winged Choughs

Australian Magpie

Australian Magpie

Australian Magpie sunning itself

 

Male Australian Magpie sunning itself

Male Australian Magpie sunning itself

I’ve had this set of photos waiting for several months until I found the time to post them. I finally got around to it.

I observed the male Australian Magpie shown in the photos in our garden one sunny day. I can’t remember how hot it was, but I was intrigued by the bird’s behaviour. It was quite unconcerned by my presence a few metres away, but this is not unusual. Our resident magpies are quite used to us moving about the garden, and although they are still a little wary, they will come quite close.

Male Australian Magpie sunning itself

Male Australian Magpie sunning itself

This one stayed almost in the one spot over about five minutes while I took the series of photos shown here. It did some preening of its feathers, but it also appeared to be sunning itself. Sunning behaviour is quite common in many Australian species. I have most commonly seen it in various species of pigeons and doves. Sometimes I’ve also seen it in association with sand bathing; House Sparrows often do this.

Male Australian Magpie sunning itself

Male Australian Magpie sunning itself

One of my reference books records instances where the wings of magpies can stretch above the head until touching during sunbathing behaviour. The bird I observed only briefly opened the wings.

These photos were taken mid morning. Many species will use sunning behaviour first thing on cold mornings.  I guess we all need a good stretch and warming up on a cold morning.

Update Feb 29th, 2016: It is thought that birds probably sunbathe to rid their plumage of lice. Read the article Sunny Side Up for a long discussion on this.

I have seen this sunbathing behaviour in the following species: Crested Pigeon, Spotted Turtledove, House Sparrows, Red Wattlebirds, and Noisy Miners.

I have since written another article about this behaviour called Topsy the Crested Pigeon.

For a much longer explanation of why birds sunbathe read this article: Sunny Side Up on the Australian Birdlife site.

Male Australian Magpie sunning itself

Male Australian Magpie sunning itself

Male Australian Magpie sunning itself

Male Australian Magpie sunning itself

Male Australian Magpie sunning itself

Male Australian Magpie sunning itself

Male Australian Magpie sunning itself

Male Australian Magpie sunning itself

Male Australian Magpie sunning itself

Male Australian Magpie sunning itself

Male Australian Magpie sunning itself

Male Australian Magpie sunning itself

Male Australian Magpie sunning itself

Male Australian Magpie sunning itself

 

 

Young Grey Currawongs

Grey Currawong (juvenile)

Grey Currawong (juvenile)

Over the last week or so we have had two young Grey Currawongs visiting the garden almost every day. They are still quite downy and their begging calls are quite pathetic compared to the far reaching, ringing calls of the adult birds.

They didn’t nest in our garden or on our block of land. I guess they nested up the road a short distance where there is a considerable patch of mallee scrub. The adults are regular visitors in our garden every day or so, but I can’t really call them resident as they come and go. We  often we hear them calling in the distance.

Click on the photos to enlarge the image.

Grey Currawong (juvenile)

Grey Currawong (juvenile)

Young Australian Magpie

Australian Magpie

Australian Magpie

I have been a little puzzled about our resident pair of Australian Magpies this spring. Although they showed signs of building a nest earlier in the spring they seemed to abandon the idea after a few days. I had observed them refurbishing the nest they have used for the last four or five years.  Instead of continuing the nest building and then sitting on the eggs and finally being busy feeding the young in the nest, they seemed content to just occupy themselves searching for food during the day, visiting the bird bath (as in the photo above) or chasing away the White-winged Choughs whenever they came into the garden.

I thought they’d given up on breeding this season.

It seems I was wrong. Earlier this week I was passing the garage when I saw a young magpie fresh out of the nest, all downy and begging for food.

This is perplexing. I still haven’t found any nest. There are two possible explanations:

  1. They made a new nest in a location I haven’t yet discovered. This is entirely possible as it would take quite a while to check every tree on our five acre block.
  2. The young bird I saw was from a neighbouring magpie territory and it had wandered into our garden.

It does not matter. It is good to see that at least one magpie was hatched in this locality this year.

Good birding.

Grey Currawong breeding

Grey Currawong

Grey Currawong

I was sitting outside on the back veranda having breakfast this morning and I heard an unusual bird call, one that was vaguely familiar but I wasn’t sure.

I looked up to see that three Grey Currawongs had flown into a tree near my wife’s Australian native plant nursery.  Two of them  still had downy plumage and both were not very confident moving around the tree. They flew to another tree and I could see that they were recent fledglings barely out of the nest. The third one was kept busy searching for beetles and spiders under the bark of the trees while the young ones persisted in begging for food.

Before long they flew off to another part of the property. It was already far too hot to go chasing after them through the scrub with a camera. Here in South Australia it is supposed to be spring with lovely sunny days with temperatures in the low to mid 20s. Instead, we are experiencing an unseasonal and record breaking heat wave. Later today it reached 42C under our veranda. That might be fine for the height of summer in January and February – but not in November.