In what was one of the best turnouts for a while the PHBG was fortunate enough to have gorgeous Springish weather and a jolly turnout at Lot 18 yesterday. Attending their first weed war day were Alison & Steve along with their gorgeous kelpie Ellie who kept herself bust checking on everyone as they spread out along the creek in the hunt for Arum Lillies and the odd bit of Broom and gnarly Gorse (way to go with those 'Man Gloves' Justin!). James also backed-up for his second war drive and put in a man sized effort. Thanks to go to Lyndall, Tim, Justin and Sam (for the brownies).
The enemy & WMDs
The Winter rains had put some decent water in the creek and the frogs were lovin' it...
An ally in the war
A great day, thanks all!
Monday, August 29, 2011
Two rare bird species observed in one morning!
A sighting from Tim:
Last Sunday morning (21 August), while walking through a PHBG member's property at the northern end of the Bull Creek Range, a bird similar in size to a blackbird caught our attention, only 5 metres from the edge of the track where we were standing. We recognised it as a Scaly Thrush (also known as a Bassian or White's Thrush). This species is rarely seen nowadays in the Mt Lofty Ranges due to declining habitat. It is also a very secretive bird, preferring dense cover. The plumage has striking black scaling or mottling on a pale background – see linked video and image:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sG5j94YTDjI

And at the same location and time, we were lucky enough to hear and see a pair of Peregrine Falcons – which didn't seem to concern the Scaly Thrush - in the tops of some tall pines.

Tim
Last Sunday morning (21 August), while walking through a PHBG member's property at the northern end of the Bull Creek Range, a bird similar in size to a blackbird caught our attention, only 5 metres from the edge of the track where we were standing. We recognised it as a Scaly Thrush (also known as a Bassian or White's Thrush). This species is rarely seen nowadays in the Mt Lofty Ranges due to declining habitat. It is also a very secretive bird, preferring dense cover. The plumage has striking black scaling or mottling on a pale background – see linked video and image:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sG5j94YTDjI

And at the same location and time, we were lucky enough to hear and see a pair of Peregrine Falcons – which didn't seem to concern the Scaly Thrush - in the tops of some tall pines.

Tim
Monday, August 15, 2011
Bush Management Workshop a winner!
The Bush Management Workshop ably run by Anthony Abley went off with a bang (or is that a cut 'n swab?!?) on a chilly Thursday night in the Prospect hill Memorial Soldiers Hall. Anthony put on a jam-packed presentation condensing a two-dat workshop into 3 hours. A great turn-out included Tony Randall from the Goolwa to Wellington Local Action Planning Association as well as groupies Paul, Jenni, Lyndall, Justin, Matt, Tim and new kid on the block James! Ant also gave out Weed Warrior show bags (well, buckets actually). A pic of said show bucket and its contents will be posted soon(ish). Thanks Ant, we learnt a heap and traded all sorts of info. A nice precusor to September's two day Bushland Condition Monitoring workshop by The Nature Conservation Society...
Sunday, August 14, 2011
We're Baaaack!
Well, after a bit of a hiatus news posting-wise, the PHBG is back! Kind of. The current Blogger set-up is proving somewhat inadequate for an embedded page like this, so towards year's I'll be looking at alternative so that EVERYONE in the group can post here. There will of course be lots to report as we gear up planning and expending the first round of the NVC grant. What we'll attempt to do is diarise the structure of the group as it changes and the way on which we develop the project over the next three years so that other bushland groups can have a crack at doing this themselves.
But 'til then, please enjoy some sporadic posting on all things bushland and groupie...
Craig
But 'til then, please enjoy some sporadic posting on all things bushland and groupie...
Craig
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