Trip

 

Birding & Natural History
around Darwin

Discover Australia's natural history in the hot, humid north where plant and animal diversity are greatest with a host who knows nature not only from a technical, biological perspective but from that of a gifted Aborigine. Earthfoot host Denise Goodfellow, whose Aboriginal name is Lawungkurr Maralngurra, will provide you with an unforgettable experience.

Host: Denise Goodfellow

When: By appointment

Length: A typical 5-day itinerary is outlined below

Number of guests: No more than four guests per trip

Fees: Denise's fee as a specialist guide is AU $300.00 a day plus expenses (food, accommodation, permits). Denise does not provide vehicles but these are available for hire through Delta which is the most flexible car hire firm in the NT and the most reliable in Denise's experience. They also have the best insurance provisions.  Guests must make own insurance arrangements.

Accommodations: Costs vary between AU $65 for a cabin in Pine Creek to approximately AU $165 a room in Kakadu. Camping is cheaper but it is only recommended during the cooler months (June-September). Permits to travel to Kakadu are AU $15 per person.

Pine Creek Diggers Rest Motel is situated 200m south of Darwin. This family-owned and operated motel features self-contained cabins with air conditioning, en suite, phone, TV and video, set in beautiful tropical gardens, off-street parking and a barbecue area. Pine Creek has the largest variety of birds in the Northern Territory so the Diggers Rest is an ideal base for a bird watching tour.

Kakadu National Park and Darwin both are 2 1/2 hours away on sealed roads. Litchfield National Park is 1 1/2 hours away and Katherine is only 50 minutes away.

Contact proprietors Pat & Ron Smith, 32 Main Terrace Pine Creek, NT Australia 0847, Ph (08) 8976 1442, Fax (08) 8976 1458. See their web site for more information.

 Best time to come: Depends on what you want. January - March are very wet and often movement is restricted because of flooding. April is drier and hot but wildlfowers and butterflies and frogs are everywhere although most birds are dispersed. The cool months of June to September are the height of the tourist season and it is hard to get accommodation except by booking a year ahead. The glorious orange-flowering Woollybutts - Eucalyptus miniata - and Fern-leaved Grevilleas are in full bloom then. October and November are hot and humid months but from then to December are the best months for viewing wildlife (many of our birds and other animals are breeding then and many plants are flowering) and the electrical storms are wonderful. It is Denise's favorite time of the year.

Perspective: Denise concentrates on whatever people are interested in whether that may be particular birds, butterflies, moths such as the Day-flying Moth Dysphania fenestrata, reptiles, plants or whatever.  People who enjoy and benefit most from these kinds of natural history trips have an holistic attitude, they like meeting locals including Aboriginal people, and they are relatively flexible so that they can take advantages of any opportunities that may arise.

For example, one bird watcher who wanted advice on buying a didgeridoo (a traditional wind instrument made from a hollow branch) accepted an invitation to join my Aboriginal family for a birthday party. He spent several hours with them the next day holding the didgeridoo while they painted. Then he was given lessons on how to imitate the calls of certain birds. 

Statement for the Impaired: Denise says not to worry if you are confined to a wheelchair or if you've got emphysema. You can still see and hear birds. At the sewage ponds and at some Top End wetlands you won't even have to get out of the car. And what's to stop you from examining the blossoms of eucalyptus, smelling the fresh coconut scent of Pterocaulon sp., meeting and talking with Aboriginal people, and just in general enjoying the Australian bush!

Cost: $300.00 a day to have Denise as your guide


Five Day Itinerary


Day 1

Start the day in Darwin, at Leanyer sewage ponds. Over 220 species of birds have been recorded in the vicinity. Many birds - Pink-eared Ducks, Wandering Whistling-ducks, Radjah Shelduck, Magpie Geese Pied Heron and Brahminy and Whistling Kites are easily seen here. The picture here shows a Radjah Shelduck, Tadorna radjah, up front, with Pied herons, Ardea picata, in the back.
Mangroves around Darwin are rich in birds, more so than such habitats in most parts of the world.and those around the sewage ponds are home to five species of honeyeater including the gorgeous Red-headed Honeyeater, three gerygones, two fantails, and four flycatchers and many more. The descending trill of Little Bronze-cuckoo is often heard although the bird itself can be quite elusive. Sometimes we find one of my favorite snakes, White-bellied Mangrove Snake, a placid and beautiful creature which feeds on crustaceans that bury in the mangrove mud, its skin is blotched black and white and sometimes orange.  If the tide is low enough we can visit mangroves in the suburb of Stuart Park just a mile or so from the City Centre, for Collared Kingfisher, Great-billed Heron, the very elusive Chestnut Rail,.a bird as big as a domestic fowl, and the pretty, inquisitive grey and white Mangrove Robin.


East Point monsoon vine-thicket, also close to the city, is a good spot for Orange-footed Scrubfowl, a large rotund megapode (large-footed bird) which lives in this forest scraping together large piles of vegetation in which eggs are laid, and then incubated by the heat from rotting leaves. It also inhabits people's gardens and drives those who like tidy yards to distraction with its scratching and scattering of new plants and leaves. Sometimes Blue Tiger butterfly, a monsoon forest species becoming increasingly rare, can be seen among the trees at East Point.
The cliffs around East Point and Darwin itself consist of a siltstone rock called porcellanite, used elsewhere in the world to make fine china.  From the Lower Cretaceous (120 myo) it is formed in part by the skeletons of uni-celled creatures called radiolaria. The cliffs, stained in rainbow hue by leaching iron compounds, glow at sunset. Washed by a sea turning aquamarine, then cobalt as the sun sinks, these beaches are a sight never to be forgotten.


Travel 60 km to Fogg Dam that afternoon. Fogg Dam is an artificial dam built for a rice project in the 1960's. It failed, but left the Top End with a wonderful lake with juxtaposed monsoon and paperbark forest, and floodplains. That night we can look for Bush Stone-curlews and owls and .nightjars. Fogg Dam is also good for snakes such as Water Python and Keelback, and frogs.


Water Python, or Boloko as it is called by the Kuninjku people to whom I am related, is my children's dreaming, meaning they are related to this snake. For them to kill Boloko would be murder, to eat her, cannibalism. Rowan my young son took this seriously indeed. The dying python he saw at age five wasn't an anonymous road victim, but his sister, and he cried as if his heart would break. My children must nurture their dreaming animal and her country.


The most comon frogs are tree frogs (family Hylidae), namely the emerald-striped Dahl's Treefrog and the rather plain Roth's (the latter has a maniacal cackle). Members of the southern frog family, the Myobatrachidae, also occur here, Marbled Frog being among the most common. Stay overnight at a nearby bed and breakfast.

 

Day 2

Next morning return to Fogg Dam early. Four species of egrets (mainly Intermediate), Black-necked Stork, or Jabiru, (shown at the right) and other birds dot the eastern side of the causeway occasionally joined by Brolga, Purple Swamphen and the odd Banded Land Rail. Jacana are common among the waterlilies on the other side. Depending on the season and time of day little birds (often referred to as LLJ's - little brown jobs) - Clamorous Reed-Warbler, Golden-headed Cisticola, Tawny Grassbird and White-browed Crake may be out in the open.


Finches - Chestnut-breasted Mannikin, Double-barred and the unbelievably gorgeous Crimson Finch, inhabit the pandanus and the reedbeds.   Actually, that brown bird to the left is a Crimson Finch, but it's a female. In the monsoon forest the pretty Rainbow Pitta hops around on the ground, the pale blue patch on its wing flashing amid the dark undergrowth, and the sonorous notes of Yellow Oriole and Rufous Shrike-thrush fill the air. The best time to see the Rainbow Pitta is around October-November when it starts to call.


Drive 120 kms on to Kakadu National Park. Along the road we may spot birds of prey depending on season, Brown Falcon -- such as the one at the right -- being one of the most common. Another animal commonly seen is a large lizard, either Sand Goanna or Gould's Goanna. They look very similar to most balanda (white people) but the Kuninjku can easily tell them apart. Only the initiated or old people can eat the former species while anyone can tuck into the latter.


That afternoon we can visit the Mamukala wetlands to look for open forest and wetland birds before traveling on to the Bardedjildji Sandstone (to pronounce 'dj' stop your tongue halfway along the palate).


This rock country is well over a thousand thousand million years old. The rocks in this particular area are layered like heaps of  pancakes. Rock Figs grow out of the sandstone (their fruit is quite disgusting to the human palate but Rock Ringtail Possums like them!), and the beautiful native gardenia Gardenia megasperma can be seen.


Animals found here include Short-eared Rock-wallaby ('wallaby' means 'little kangaroo'), Chestnut-quilled Rock-pigeon and Sandstone Shrike-thrush.
Return after sunset spotlighting,along the road for button-quail, owls, and nightjars. Stay overnight at Kakadu Holiday Village.

 

Day 3

Leave accommodation early and head for the art site of Nourlangie. Scattered throughout the rock shelters are paintings done by Aboriginal people. Although dating is an an inexact science as yet, it is thought some are over twenty thousand years old. My brothers-in-law, now dead, were among the last men to paint on rocks (for the curious, one of these men, Bobby Bardajarai Nganjmirra's paintings on bark are in the Kluge Collection, Virginia).


The escarpment has many endemics - Banded Fruit-dove, Chestnut-quilled Rock-pigeon, White-lined Honeyeater, White-throated Grass-wren. Silver-crowned Friarbird, a large and quite ugly honeyeater, is commonly seen among flowering trees around this area.


And not only birds, but plants and reptiles and mammals such as the Black Wallaroo  ('wallaroo' means 'rock kangaroo') pictured at the left. Wallaroos are marsupials endemic to the Arnhemland escarpment. This is a male. Females are grey.


Travel 160 km farther to the little town of Pine Creek where we can visit the sewage ponds. Several bird species are to be found in the vicinity but one regular is the pretty little Black-fronted Dotterel which breeds here. Finches - Masked, Long-tailed and Double-barred are common as is Red-backed Fairy-wren. Cockatiel, Hooded Parrot, Red-winged Parrot (pictured at the right) and Red-tailed Black Cockatoo. and a couple of species of woodswallow, neat little birds related to our butcherbirds.


Also found throughout the area in suitable habitat is the endemic Partridge Pigeon, a rather tame little bird that waddles and has a startling red face. In areas of stringybark one can hear the call of Black-tailed Treecreeper. I describe it as sounding as someone would if he whistled with his head down a toilet bowl!


Bats inhabit caves and old mine sites throughout the area. One, the carnivorous Ghost Bat, has huge ears and looks a little like a deformed rabbit. Called Buma Buma by Kuninjku people its closest relatives are found in Africa.


Stay overnight in a cabin at Digger's Rest.

 

Day 4

Early next morning travel 50 km to the Fergusson River where if you sit quietly you may see Hooded Parrots and (depending on time of year) Gouldian Finches among myriad species of other birds. Gouldian Finches are spectacular little birds. They are sometimes called Rainbow Finches which well describes their collection of hues - purple, yellow, cerulean blue, green. The famous naturalist John Gould (1804-1881) named the bird in honor of his wife Elizabeth, a fitting memorial to one whose exquisite paintings of Australian birds helped bring them to the world.


There are interesting plants here, a rare pink and black flowering grevillea and a member of the daisy family that smells like fresh coconut and was used by Aboriginal people as a mosquito repellent. Nearby Edith Falls is a beautiful pool bordered by Fern-leaved Grevillea and other trees.


A night visit to nearby Umbrawarra Gorge may produce good views of Rock Ringtail Possum, Sugar Glider and Olive Python (Mandjudurrk to the Kuninjku). Overnight at Digger's Rest.

 

Day 5

Travel north to Litchfield Park. This area is known for its numerous waterfalls and plunge pools surrounded by thick monsoon forest such as that at the right. Plants include the fragrant white-blossomed Fagrea racemosa and the large tree Xanthostemon eucalyptoides. Like many Top End plants these have no common name. Many slender palms grace these forests, among them the red-berried Carpentaria palm, now a favorite of tropical gardeners across northern Australia.


Buley Rockholes are my favourite spot. Several basins, up to twenty feet across and six feet deep have been carved out of the sandstone here, and are filled with native fish - red and yellow Chequered Rainbowfish, purple-spotted gudgeons and banded grunters. A delightful spot for easy snorkeling.


Return to Darwin, only 170 km away.

 

Some Options

Option1

Spend an extra half day in the mangroves and monsoon forest patches around Darwin. Stilt-rooted Mangrove Rhizophora stylosa with its looping aerial roots, mud, sandflies and the odd crocodile turn some people off this fascinating habitat. But take the plunge (but not literally! ) and you'll find an entrancing world of new birds, periophthalmic mudskippers and interesting plants.


Option 2

Half a day at the Adelaide River stalking mangrove birds including the uncommon Mangrove Golden Whistler, and estuarine crocodiles. Opportunities are opening up here with possibly a trip on an amphibious vehicle across the wetlands.


Option 3

Comfortable, easy-to-drive houseboats are available on the Mary River. Not for everyone, just those who like relaxed wetlands bird watching (and crocodile-spotting) and perhaps a spot of fishing. Glass of Aussie red in hand watch the sun set red over the floodplains, its departure heralded by the mad chorus of Blue-winged Kookaburras and the bark of crocodile.


Option 4

Spend another day in Kakadu and climb the escarpment (shown at the right) looking for White-throated Grasswren and other sandstone endemics. Grasswrens are hard to find in the early to mid months of the year and as it is a steep 300 m. climb with lots of prickly 'spinifex' at the top I would suggest it only for the really dedicated or those with big lungs and thick skins.


Option 5

A drive down the Victoria Highway 450 km south west of Darwin will net the birdwatcher a whole bunch of other species. Apart from those finches named already, here there are Zebra Finch and Star Finch. Among the cane grass at Victoria River and elsewhere lives the exquisite Purple-crowned Fairy-wren. Among the rocks live the pretty rust-colored Spinifex Pigeon and White-quilled Rock-pigeon. The elusive Grey Falcon is best seen in this area. The escarpment of this area is spectacular. Overnight at the Victoria River Inn.


Option 6

Take a 16 mile trip up the wide, brown Adelaide River to an isolated tropical island. Once reserved for only fishers who come from all over the world to catch barramundi, this lodge is now available for birdwatchers. Watch for Shining Flycatcher and Black Bittern among the native bamboo and paperbarks. Gorgeous Crimson Finch abound here, and sometimes nest in the rafters of the buildings. White-bellied Sea-eagle, Brahminy Kite, Marsh Harrier and several other raptors are recorded from the vicinity. Brolga dance along the banks and the reedbeds, depending on what time of the year one visits, are often alive with the song of cisticola and warblers. Goannas, turtles and crocodiles abound. No Swimming. Accommodation is basic but comfortable, in air-conditioned bedrooms elevated over the river. At night one can sit outside on the wide verandah and watch the sun set and the river go by to the calls of nocturnal birds and, if it's mating season, the bellow of crocodiles. Costs $200 Au per person per day.

 

Email: Denise Goodfellow

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