Unbelievable to see two Tui in the industrial area of Wigram. Saw these on my lunchtime walk!!
Count of 4... All in a row. Making a lot of noise for the neighbours!
Feeding in red hot poker. Flew off toward eucalypts on Hackthorn rd.
Having a rest during a bit of agro. Another bird was in a nearby tree, scolding them. Presumably both males.
Photographed in Oxford Forest Conservation Area.
•16 cm.,including long fanned tail, 8g., pied bird has grey head, white eyebrow, brown back, yellow underparts, black and white tail., juvenile similar but browner body; black phase, sooty black but for white spot behind the eye.
Rhipidura fuliginosa 1st prize , best mum and dad.
Fantails live in the forest and in our gardens. A pair of fantails raise three or four families, each with three or four chicks each summer. It is hard work. The chicks are fed every 10 minutes, which is more than 100 times a day! No wonder baby fantails grow fast. 15 days after hatching blind and naked, the chicks have grown feathers and are ready to leave the nest.
Cats, rats, stoats and mynas are the fantails' enemies. Of all their eggs and chicks, only a few survive and grow up.
Fantails mostly live on forest edges and in scrub habitats. They can often be seen in town in parks and gardens. Fantails will usually be seen alone or in pairs during summer, but will often form flocks during the winter. Fantails occasionally eat fruit and berries, but they mostly eat insects. Fantails are very good at catching insects in the air - they can change direction very quickly when they are flying.
Photographed in Oxford Forest Conservation Area.
•16 cm.,including long fanned tail, 8g., pied bird has grey head, white eyebrow, brown back, yellow underparts, black and white tail., juvenile similar but browner body; black phase, sooty black but for white spot behind the eye.
Rhipidura fuliginosa 1st prize , best mum and dad.
Fantails live in the forest and in our gardens. A pair of fantails raise three or four families, each with three or four chicks each summer. It is hard work. The chicks are fed every 10 minutes, which is more than 100 times a day! No wonder baby fantails grow fast. 15 days after hatching blind and naked, the chicks have grown feathers and are ready to leave the nest.
Cats, rats, stoats and mynas are the fantails' enemies. Of all their eggs and chicks, only a few survive and grow up.
Fantails mostly live on forest edges and in scrub habitats. They can often be seen in town in parks and gardens. Fantails will usually be seen alone or in pairs during summer, but will often form flocks during the winter. Fantails occasionally eat fruit and berries, but they mostly eat insects. Fantails are very good at catching insects in the air - they can change direction very quickly when they are flying.
Photographed in Oxford Forest Conservation Area.
•16 cm.,including long fanned tail, 8g., pied bird has grey head, white eyebrow, brown back, yellow underparts, black and white tail., juvenile similar but browner body; black phase, sooty black but for white spot behind the eye.
Rhipidura fuliginosa 1st prize , best mum and dad.
Fantails live in the forest and in our gardens. A pair of fantails raise three or four families, each with three or four chicks each summer. It is hard work. The chicks are fed every 10 minutes, which is more than 100 times a day! No wonder baby fantails grow fast. 15 days after hatching blind and naked, the chicks have grown feathers and are ready to leave the nest.
Cats, rats, stoats and mynas are the fantails' enemies. Of all their eggs and chicks, only a few survive and grow up.
Fantails mostly live on forest edges and in scrub habitats. They can often be seen in town in parks and gardens. Fantails will usually be seen alone or in pairs during summer, but will often form flocks during the winter. Fantails occasionally eat fruit and berries, but they mostly eat insects. Fantails are very good at catching insects in the air - they can change direction very quickly when they are flying.
a tree kingfisher found in the mangroves, forests, and river valleys of Australia, Fiji, Indonesia, New Caledonia, New Zealand (where it is the only native species of kingfisher) Norfolk Island, Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands, and the Wallis and Futuna Islands. In New Zealand, T. sanctus vagans shows altitudinal migration, with post-breeding movement from higher altitudes to the coast and also from forest to coast and open lands.
It is 19-23 cm long.
The kingfisher is a brightly coloured bird, deep green-blue on the head and upperparts. Pale yellowish buff underparts and a creamy white collar around the neck. Long, dark, broad bill and black eye with a yellowish buff eyebrow that starts at the bill and finishes above and beyond the eye.
The dagger-like bill is used in the breeding season to excavate a tunnel in an earth bank by repeatedly flying at the bank at full speed, neck outstretched and uttering a peculiar whirring call. Once the tunnel has started and the hole is big enough to perch in, the kingfisher then continues to excavate the tunnel by pecking and scooping out the loosen earth. The tunnel is sloped slightly upwards and ends with a chamber for the nest. Despite their name, kingfishers do not necessarily eat fish. They tend to populate coastal areas but some are entirely terrestrial. Those around the coastal waters eat small crabs and fish, in fresh water they'll eat tadpoles, freshwater crayfish and other small fish. In the open country they eat earthworms, cicadas, weta, stick insects, dragonflies, chafer beetles, other beetles, spiders, lizards, mice and small birds (especially silvereyes). I have seen them taking cicadas on the wing during heavy hatches of these insects.