From Julatten we headed down from
the Atherton Tableland to Mossman, skirting the northern edge of Mowbray
National Park descending steeply through rainforest. Once again, as soon as the
terrain flattened we were in sugar cane country. It would seem all of the
lowland rainforest between the coast and the foothills of the Great Dividing
Range in Queensland has been cleared, mainly for sugar cane. No sizeable chunk
has been preserved; only the rainforest on steep country near the coast has
survived?
After stocking up with food we
drove north to Wonga Beach where we have been for the past three days. Wonga
Beach is only 12km short of the Daintree River, so we could easily access our
birding cruise and a day trip north of the river to Cape Tribulation and beyond.
There were two operators offering
small boat, small group, specific bird watching and photography cruises on the
Daintree River. Both operate from the jetty at Daintree Village and both run
for two hours starting at dawn. Almost on the flip of a coin we chose to go
with Ian Worcester who runs Daintree River Wild Watch, see details at www.daintreeriverwildwatch.com.au
Early morning on the Daintree River |
Other larger cruise boats operate
from Daintree Village however these are large group tours focused more on the
scenery and seeing crocs. Crocs are also seen on the small boat birding
cruises. Personally looking for crocs is not of great interest however they are
impressive ancient predators and seeing a large one sunning on a river’s edge
is always a good reminder to be croc aware in these northern waters.
It was a refreshing change to be
out early on the river in scenic country looking for birds. It is often impossible
to access river environments without a boat. Going with an experienced guide is
a huge extra bonus – we would not have found two of the rare species, Papuan
Frogmouth and Great-billed Heron without a guide.
Our first encounter was a pair of
Shinning Flycatchers feeding along the edge of a backwater. When I first saw
this species some years ago I thought the female was more attractive however
when the light is right, the black plumage of the male lights up with glossy satin
blue colouring which is very attractive.
The female Shining Flycatcher. |
The above females mate? The male often looks black however when the light angle is right they are blue. |
After making our way downstream,
our guide, without announcing any purpose, nosed the boat in under a large
mangrove tree at the junction of a side creek. With some difficulty at first we
spotted our guide’s objective, a pair of very cryptic Papuan Frogmouths perched
together in the mangrove above us. One was a grey coloured male and the other
was a brown or rufous coloured female. The birds must roost in this location on
a regular basis. Finding them from scratch would be a difficult task as there
are many kilometres of suitable mangroves along the Daintree River to roost in.
The birds did not seem to mind
our intrusion. After a cursory glance through half opened eyes they resumed the
typical dead tree limb pose of all frogmouths while we snapped away below them.
The pair of Papuan Frogmouths roosting in a large mangrove tree on the Daintree River. The brown coloured bird on left is the female and the grey bird is the male. |
The male. |
We left the frogmouths to their daytime sleep and made out way up the narrow side creek. It brought back memories of a river trip on the Tambopata in the Peruvian Amazon in 2011, lush jungle growing down and over the river banks. In the side creek our guide located a Great-billed Heron, an elusive bird many twitchers come here to tick, including many overseas birders. On board we had a German birder who first made a birding trip to Australia 23 years ago and has made many visits since.
We only found one Great-billed
Heron, a juvenile bird about 10 months old according to our guide. The bird was
perched high in a dense tree making photography difficult. Fortunately the bird
decided to fly a short distance downstream where we found it again perched more
or less in the open in the top of a leafy tree canopy.
The elusive Great-billed Heron. This is a juvenile bird about 10 months old. They are large birds and the name great-billed is certainly an appropriate description. |
There are a number of fruit
eating pigeons and doves in the rainforest. They are mostly only heard however
I did manage a few shots of a Brown Cuckoo-Dove and an Emerald Dove. We often
heard the amazing calls of Wompoo Pigeons however have only had a few brief
glimpses of these birds.
I've just found your blog through a link with Gouldiae and having read your description of your boat journey up Barratt Creek I'm feeling quite homesick. That's my backyard! Wonderful photos, especially of the GBH which is a particular favourite of mine. It is difficult birding in the rainforest, much easier to see birds along the margins as you suggested. Have a good trip home.
ReplyDeleteCheers Barbara