Tuesday, 6 August 2024

A Winter Birding Break in Far North Queensland

 

Keith and Lindsay Fisher, July 2024.

A week away from Julatten on a birding trip was just what we needed after a year of health issues confining us to home. A look at the weather forecast showed the persistent showers we had been having on the Atherton Tablelands were due to be replaced by a few weeks of dry winter weather, so plans were put in place.



Our first stop was Pinnarendi Station Stay, which is just south of the Atherton Tablelands on the Kennedy Highway, north of Forty Mile Scrub. It is a working cattle station run by Ronnie and Nadine Atkinson and we have been visiting since it was first set-up in 2016. We have previously surveyed the property with the North Queensland Natural History Group helping compile the stations flora and fauna lists. There are three kilometres of walking tracks taking in three dams always with a selection of waterbirds plus plenty of birdlife in the eucalyptus woodlands including a few friendly Grey Butcherbird.


Garden Dam
Grey Butcherbird

The flowering Grevillea pteridifolia (Fern-leaved Grevillea) was attracting many honeyeaters including the dominant Noisy Miner. We were pleased to see a creche of about 50 young Chestnut-breasted Mannikin being supervised by a few adults at one of the dams.

The camp ground provides powered and un-powered sites with one of the best features being the excellent Cafe – The Brick Oven. We stayed there for our first two nights enjoying the walks and also the yummy pizza!

Then it was off to Flat Creek Station, also a cattle station, which is SW of Georgetown and close to the Gilbert River. It is owned by Peter and Adam, who were away, and their caretaker Rick showed us around. The camp has a donkey boiler for showers and toilets and is a popular fossicking site. There were a number of fossickers camped there, however, the birdwatching is great as well. We found a pleasant spot beside a dry creek in the woodland and set-up camp for three nights. We were quickly surrounded by Apostlebirds and Squatter Pigeons, which certainly made us feel we were away on a birding trip!


Flat Creek Station Camp


Squatter Pigeon

Squatter Pigeon

A late afternoon bird walk had us trying to keep up with the species as they flitted around in the shrubs Restless Flycatcher, Weebill, Little Friarbird, Black-faced Woodswallow and White-winged Triller. The next morning a walk in the other direction was as equally productive including White-throated Gerygone, Black-faced Cuckooshrike and Grey-crowned Babbler.


Grey-crowned Babbler

White-throated Gerygone

We spent quite a bit of time just driving along the tracks and stopping to bird and checking out the dams. There are three dams plus a waterhole next to the camp site, so we had a great variety of birdlife to enjoy including Green and Cotton Pygmy-Goose, Black-necked Stork, White-necked Heron and Yellow-billed Spoonbill.


White-necked Heron


Green and Cotton Pygmy-goose

At night Keith heard Southern Boobook and Spotted Nightjar.


After we left, we had a quick visit to Cumberland Dam which was, as usual, full of campers as well as plenty of birds. Then back to Pinnarendi for a night where we enjoyed their excellent Thursday night barramundi special in the company of some entertaining caravaners. Another walk in the morning before treating ourselves to coffee, scones, cream and jam and then heading back to the Atherton Tablelands.

Wondecla State Forest, near Herberton, has always been a favourite place of ours which we have visited many times over the years. Reading the reports of the monthly Birdlife NQ field trips there made us want to join in, but we needed to be staying close-by for the 7am start. Our last day away was the morning of the Wondecla field trip, so a perfect opportunity to attend. We checked out the possible camp sites nearby and were delighted to find a Hipcamp site further along Springvale Road just beyond the field trip meeting place. There are five sites and they are large and well spaced alongside Flaggy Creek. Here we were welcomed by the owner Tim who pointed out the properties walking tracks. As nightfall came the temperature started dropping, by now we were were getting used to the cold nights, as the last two had been 2°c, however, that night it went down to zero! Lucky we were snug in our Tvan camper-trailer, but having to get up early to join the field trip was hard work. We had coffee and porridge and were ready to go, but then had to remember the best way to defrost the windscreen - not something we had ever done in the Tropics before! We met with a small group of intrepid birders in beanies and scarves and soon got sore necks peering into the high eucalypt canopy where any birds that were about were catching the sun.


Wondecla Birding Group

Eventually, it warmed up and we enjoyed seeing the special birds that make this habitat home. One of the most interesting birds in the area is a population known locally as the Herberton Honeyeater, which is more typical of Yellow-tinted Honeyeater and maybe also confused with a Fuscous Honeyeater. Until it’s true status is resolved they are usually referred to as Fuscous Honeyeater. (read more on this subject in “ Birds of the Wet Tropics of Queensland & Great Barrier Reef & Where to Find Them” by Lloyd Nielsen). Bridled Honeyeater were everywhere making us wonder if any were left in the rainforest! Scaly-breasted and Rainbow Lorikeet added to the colour in contrast to the Black-faced Cuckooshrike.


Fuscous Honeyeater (Herberton Honeyeater)

After a long morning tea and chat it was time to go back to our camp. Here we found the one bird that had eluded us all morning, the Eastern Shrike-tit, which had been heard but not seen. Two obligingly flew around the camp as we packed up delaying our departure, a fitting end before we returned to Julatten after a very pleasant and cool week away.


Eastern Shrike-tit


CONTACT DETAILS:-

PINNARENDI STATION STAY

www.thebrickoven.com.au

Bookings advised for camping and for meals.

Flora and fauna lists under the Walking Track heading on their website.

 

 Pinnarendi Bird Species List

 

Emu Pied Stilt Yellow-throated Miner
Brown Quail Black-fronted Dotterel Red-browed Pardalote
Magpie Goose Masked Lapwing Striated Pardalote
Plumed Whistling-Duck Barking Owl White-throated Gerygone
Wandering Whistling-Duck Southern Boobook Western Gerygone
Black Swan Black-shouldered Kite Weebill
Green Pygmy-goose Square-tailed Kite Grey-crowned Babbler
Australian Wood Duck Pacific Baza Varied Sittella
Hardhead Wedge-tailed Eagle Australasian Figbird
Pacific Black Duck Swamp Harrier Olive-backed Oriole
Grey Teal Brown Goshawk Rufous Whistler
Australasian Grebe Collared Sparrowhawk Grey Shrike-thrush
Hoary-headed Grebe Whistling Kite Ground Cuckoo-shrike
Squatter Pigeon Black Kite Black-faced Cuckoo-shrike
Common Bronzewing Rainbow Bee-eater White-bellied Cuckoo-shrike
Crested Pigeon Oriental Dollarbird Common Cicadabird
Diamond Dove Sacred Kingfisher White-winged Triller
Peaceful Dove Laughing Kookaburra Pied Currawong
Bar-shouldered Dove Blue-winged Kookaburra Australian Magpie
Tawny Frogmouth Nankeen Kestrel Pied Butcherbird
Australian Owlet-nightjar Australian Hobby Grey Butcherbird
Pheasant Coucal Brown Falcon White-br. Woodswallow
Channel-billed Cuckoo Red-tailed Black-Cockatoo Willie Wagtail
Horsfield's Bronze-Cuckoo Galah Rufous Fantail
Fan-tailed Cuckoo Sulphur-crested Cockatoo Grey Fantail
Brolga Pale-headed Rosella Leaden Flycatcher
Australian Bustard Rainbow Lorikeet Paperbark Flycatcher
Black-necked Stork Scaly-breasted Lorikeet Magpie-lark
Royal Spoonbill Red-winged Parrot Torresian Crow
Australian White Ibis Great Bowerbird Australian Raven
Straw-necked Ibis Brown Treecreeper Lemon-bellied Flycatcher
Nankeen Night-Heron Red-backed Fairy-wren Jacky Winter
Cattle Egret Banded Honeyeater Golden-headed Cisticola
White-necked Heron Brown Honeyeater Rufous Songlark
Great Egret Blue-faced Honeyeater Tawny Grassbird
Plumed Egret White-throated Honeyeater Tree Martin
White-faced Heron Little Friarbird Silvereye
Little Egret Noisy Friarbird Common Myna
Australian Pelican Scarlet Honeyeater Mistletoebird
Little Pied Cormorant Rufous-throated Honeyeater Chestnut-breasted Mannikin
Little Black Cormorant Lewin's Honeyeater Red-browed Finch
Australasian Darter Yellow-faced Honeyeater Double-barred Finch
Bush Stone-curlew Noisy Miner                                             August 2024
                                                                                                        127 Species

FLAT CREEK STATION

email – flatck@bigpond.com

Mention you are birdwatchers. $10pp per night – cash.

4WD necessary for exploring around the property and suggest a map tracking program such as ExploreOz Traveller to see where you are! Also, no internet so good idea to down load Bird Data maps.


FLAGGY CREEK CARAVAN CAMP

hipcamp.com/en-AU

0438 828 991