Archive for the 'Pigeons and Doves' Category

Crested Pigeon resting

Crested Pigeon, Murray Bridge, South Australia

Crested Pigeon, Murray Bridge, South Australia

A few days ago I took a series of photos of one of the  Crested Pigeons resident in our garden. This bird was sitting in one of our bird baths. Normally they just sit on the edge and take a short drink, but this one must have felt the need to sit in the water. I don’t think there was much water in it, but it still looked rather comical.

Subsequent photos show the bird in various poses before it decided to fly off.

Crested Pigeon, Murray Bridge, South Australia

Crested Pigeon, Murray Bridge, South Australia

Crested Pigeon, Murray Bridge, South Australia

Crested Pigeon, Murray Bridge, South Australia

Crested Pigeon, Murray Bridge, South Australia

Crested Pigeon, Murray Bridge, South Australia

Crested Pigeon, Murray Bridge, South Australia

Crested Pigeon, Murray Bridge, South Australia

Crested Pigeons, Botanic Park, Adelaide

Crested Pigeon, Botanic Park, Adelaide

Crested Pigeon, Botanic Park, Adelaide

Crested Pigeons are one of my favourite birds. We have a number resident in our garden and they have even nested several times within a few metres of our house. When the breeding season has been successful I have seen up to 35 Crested Pigeons sitting on the power lines running past our property. Elsewhere in Murray Bridge I have even seen about 60 in a loose flock sitting on power lines along the road.

Crested Pigeon, Botanic Park, Adelaide

Crested Pigeon, Botanic Park, Adelaide

Crested Pigeons are widespread throughout Australia except for the driest parts of the inland, southern Victoria and they are absent from Tasmania. They are also largely absent from the northern most parts of Australia. This distribution is changing and some Crested Pigeons can be found in the Melbourne region, for example, something that was rare as recent as a decade ago.

Crested Pigeon, Botanic Park, Adelaide

Crested Pigeon, Botanic Park, Adelaide

Crested Pigeons are ground feeders and can often be seen feeding in parks in loose flocks numbering in the dozens. This is the case in Botanic Park between the Adelaide Botanic Gardens and the Adelaide Zoo where the photos on this post were taken.

Crested Pigeon, Botanic Park, Adelaide

Crested Pigeon, Botanic Park, Adelaide

The birds in these photos were busy displaying to one another, more interested in breeding than in my wife and I having afternoon tea in beautiful park on a lovely spring afternoon.

Further reading:

 Botanic Park, Adelaide

Botanic Park, Adelaide

Spotted Turtledove nesting

Spotted Turtledove

Spotted Turtledove

One morning last week while having breakfast I noticed a Spotted Turtledove flying frequently to a melaleuca bush near our sunroom.  As we watched it flew down to the ground several times, each time collecting fine twigs and then it carried the twigs back to the nest. This went on sporadically over the nest few days.

Two days ago I searched the bush and eventually found the nest, complete with the female sitting on the nest. Like most doves and pigeons the nest is a flimsy affair, consisting of barely enough twigs to hold the eggs. How the babies manage to stay in the nest beats me.  Mind you, I will give the birds full points for hiding this nest. It is very hard to find as it’s located in some very thick foliage. Should make photography of the babies quite challenging – perhaps not possible. They are easily spooked from the eggs or young so I might just let them get on with hatching the eggs and later feeding the young.

Peaceful Dove in our garden

Peaceful Dove, Cleland Wildlife Park

Peaceful Dove, Cleland Wildlife Park

Last week I heard the lovely sound of a Peaceful Dove in our garden. I went chasing after it with my camera but it wouldn’t sit still long enough or in good light for me to get a good shot of it. So I’ve had to use several photos taken several years ago in a walk through aviary at Cleland Wildlife Park in the Adelaide Hills.

While this dove is common and widespread in our district they don’t seem to come into our garden all that often. We usually hear and see the resident Spotted Turtledoves and Crested Pigeons every day, but this beautiful bird seems to be a little shy about staying around for very long. Because of this we are always delighted when we hear its soft call in the trees near the house, and even more delighted when it comes close enough to see.

Peaceful Dove, Cleland Wildlife Park

Peaceful Dove, Cleland Wildlife Park

Feral Pigeons pipe dream home

Rock Doves (Feral Pigeons)

Rock Doves (Feral Pigeons)

We have quite a few Feral Pigeons (Rock Doves) in various places around our home town of Murray Bridge, South Australia. They are present in large numbers around the CBD and the various large factories and other types of buildings around town.

On our way home from visiting the shopping areas we often drive past a used steel and metal outlet. Along the boundary fence they have some large racks on which are stored numerous steel pipes, as shown in the photos.  The local feral pigeons have decided that these pipes make excellent apartment buildings. They have been nesting and roosting in the pipes for quite a few years. Obviously there is no great demand for these pipes in the used pipe business.

I’ve often tried to remember to take my camera with to get a few photos of them. I remembered earlier this week.

What I want to know is how they survived the heat of our recent extreme summer. With air temperatures often reaching 48C+ and the sun temperature probably 55-60C, how did they survive.  And were the eggs in the nests cooked nicely after several such days of high temperatures?

Rock Doves (Feral Pigeons)

Rock Doves (Feral Pigeons)