These are, thankfully, not as destructive as the Sulphur Crested. They are rarer than the Sulphurs, so they are more difficult to see. When they are seen, they are usually very 'shy' around people and fly away readily and are often high up in the tree canopy. This pair were about 10 meters up in a neighbouring evergreen happily eating the cones and sending a rain of bits down onto the neighbour's roof. I will post some o the good photos of the pair together anon.
17 December 2008
Black Cockatoos
These are, thankfully, not as destructive as the Sulphur Crested. They are rarer than the Sulphurs, so they are more difficult to see. When they are seen, they are usually very 'shy' around people and fly away readily and are often high up in the tree canopy. This pair were about 10 meters up in a neighbouring evergreen happily eating the cones and sending a rain of bits down onto the neighbour's roof. I will post some o the good photos of the pair together anon.
14 December 2008
Birds of the Garden
13 December 2008
12 December 2008
The Albatross
Below: Some of the battles over right to the food. Even though the fights loked very fierce, especially with the very hooked beaks and sheer size and strength of these birds, none of them appeared harmed. After the battles, the victor would spread out to about 2/3 rds wingspan and move back to the food, often holding wings out in a size/dominance and territory display, as can been seen in the above photo. I was close enough to several of these that I was soaked from the sprays of water-- seeing a bird of this size quite literally *run on water* at another bird, sometimes stepping on others in the path, was an amazing sight. In the last photo, you can see that they will raise up so high out of the water with massive webbed feet and wings to literally stand on the surface like a person walking on a full-wave waterbed.
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