Rocks near Miaree Pool, WA, Australia. There was a reasonably large rain front coming through too, hence the cloudy sky.
Thursday, January 07, 2010
Rocks near Miaree Pool, WA, Australia.
Monday, December 28, 2009
Birding targets for 2010
For 2009 my target was to increase my life list to 200+. It is currently sitting on 202 and will remain there unless something unusual appears locally...
For 2010 I am aiming to pass 250 - this should prove quite a challenge! A few of the target species are below:
- Common Pheasant and Indian Peafowl - going to have to take a day trip to Rottnest Island for these. Should also be able to pick up Rock Parrot and a wader or two hopefully as well.
- Noisy Scrub-bird/Western Bristlebird/Western Whipbird (a.k.a. the Big Three) - we are planning two trips to Cheynes Beach in 2010 so hopefully I can see these birds.
- White-browed Babbler (the first of many "inland from the metropolitan area" birds I want to see.
- Stubble Quail/Little Button-quail/Painted Button-quail - so far all quail apart from the Brown variety have eluded me.
- Cuckoos (generally). I have seen a few but should be seeing a lot more...
- Miscellaneous honeyeaters.
Please note that by targets I mean that I want to see and photograph these birds, not shoot them...
Saturday, December 26, 2009
Grey-crowned Babbler
Bird number 202 on my life list is the Grey-crowned Babbler. I found a group of about 4 of them creating a ruckus amongst the trees on the edge of the Maitland River at Miaree Pool (near Karratha, WA, Australia). The name is descriptive on all counts.
It is worth noting that I have taken a bird off my list. The more I talk to other birders the more I realise that the Mute Swans at Northam aren't really a free, breeding population anymore. Perhaps at some stage in the future they may be (again) but given that they are introduced I'm not too fussed.
Monday, December 21, 2009
BAWA Twitchathon 2009
The BirdsWA Twitchathon was held over the 12-13 December 2009.
I was a member of The Big Twits - other members were Martin Cake, John Graff and Alan Collins (all seriously good birders). I have learned a lot from these guys.
The event was a great experience - I added 12 species to my life list including (but not limited to):
- Little Penguin (swimming in the ocean, not at Penguin Island);
- Jacky Winter (Dryandra Forrest);
- Nankeen Night Heron (at Herdsman Lake).
We finished 3rd with 139 species in the 24 hour race. First place had 149 species, second place had 143 species.
Tuesday, December 15, 2009
New gadget/early Christmas present
I recently picked up my own Christmas present - a 3rd Generation 8GB iPod Touch. So far I have been very impressed. Current apps that I like are:
I also purchased a Belkin leather case and screen protector for it.
- BirdSight AU (pretty good, could do with some extra features like lumping/splitting);
- Convert Units (does the job well);
- Holy Bible;
- Mactracker (very good for a computer collector);
- TouchCalc;
- Sudoku (great apart from the fact that it tells you when you have placed a number incorrectly, which makes the game much easier than a paper version);
- To Do (basic To Do list manager);
- File lite (superb application that allows files to be stored on the iPod Touch and viewed).
I also purchased a Belkin leather case and screen protector for it.
Monday, November 09, 2009
Bird #187
Bird number 187 on my life list is the Black-tailed Native-hen.
I saw a single bird at the Peninsula Ornamental Gardens in Maylands after a tipoff from the Birds WA sightings page. On two consecutive days I located the bird within 5 metres of the same spot. It seems to prefer foraging along the scrub/lawn edge where it can quickly duck for cover if disturbed.
Thanks to Peter Clifton for finding it!
I saw a single bird at the Peninsula Ornamental Gardens in Maylands after a tipoff from the Birds WA sightings page. On two consecutive days I located the bird within 5 metres of the same spot. It seems to prefer foraging along the scrub/lawn edge where it can quickly duck for cover if disturbed.
Thanks to Peter Clifton for finding it!
Wednesday, October 28, 2009
Wednesday, October 21, 2009
Mac mini Server
I think this is a really cool idea - a Mac mini with dual HDDs (no optical drive) and a copy of Snow Leopard Server. If only they had 2.5" HDDs bigger than 500GB.
I also think Apple should have dropped a few of the USB2.0 ports and added a second gigabit ethernet port (although that would have required a motherboard change, the second HDD just requires the internal adapter and case to be modified).
Still - very cool. If I only had the spare cash...
I also think Apple should have dropped a few of the USB2.0 ports and added a second gigabit ethernet port (although that would have required a motherboard change, the second HDD just requires the internal adapter and case to be modified).
Still - very cool. If I only had the spare cash...
Tuesday, October 20, 2009
The Burrup again...
Sunday, October 18, 2009
Formatting drives in 2.5 inch external enclosures
I have a somewhat generic BlueEye O2 USB2.0/FW400 2.5" external drive enclosure. I was recently trying to format some older laptop drives (2.5" PATA) and discovered that the "erase" and "partition" options in Disk Utility (Mac OS X 10.5.5 version) always fail when I was connecting using USB but work fine when connecting using FireWire. The error message is along the lines of I/O error or something. I'm sure glad my MacBook has FireWire...
I wonder whether this is a limitation of the BlueEye chipset or the Disk Utility software. I really should upgrade 10.5.5 to 10.5.8 too...
I wonder whether this is a limitation of the BlueEye chipset or the Disk Utility software. I really should upgrade 10.5.5 to 10.5.8 too...
Thursday, October 08, 2009
Sunday, September 20, 2009
Burrup Peninsula, Dampier, Western Australia
Friday, September 18, 2009
Sigh...
From my office window I can see a pair of Australian Wood Ducks with a duckling in tow. They have been roaming around the park across the road for the past few days. What a nice life...
Wednesday, September 02, 2009
Updated (again) Planes to Karratha
- Fokker 100 (Alliance Airlines);
- Boeing 737-400;
- British Aerospace 146;
- Boeing 717-200;
- Embraer E-Jets E-190 (Virgin Blue).
The Embraer E-Jets E-190 is the latest addition to the list...
Wednesday, August 05, 2009
A bit of an update
It has been a while since I have blogged anything so here is a bit of an update:

- Work has been insane (both in terms of difficulty and work load) recently, so much for the downturn (I guess that is a good thing for me);
- Went on my second pelagic bird watching trip (both have been off Hillarys in Western Australia), added two new birds to my life list but felt quite seasick...
- The model trains have been going well - starting to clean up sections of ugly wiring, fix dodgy sections of track etc. Adding bits and pieces to the collection (most of it second hand). Starting to work on the scenery a bit too.
Yellow-nosed Albatross (Diomedea (Thalassarche) chlororhynchos, race bassi).
Sunday, July 12, 2009
SBS Ashes Coverage
I have been really enjoying the SBS Ashes coverage (although I have been only watching the first few hours of each day). The three Australian hosts have been entertaining and the Sky commentators in Wales have been excellent.
The only unusual aspect of the SBS coverage has been the advertisement breaks. Each one starts with a glimpse of one ad followed by a completely different ad played in full. Has anyone else noticed this? Is the first ad a mistake? Or is it a new subliminal advertising scheme because enough of the first ad is shown for you to know what it is?
Sunday, July 05, 2009
You've got to love the Newton community...
Check this link out - the Apple Newton fights on!
http://arstechnica.com/apple/news/2009/06/impending-newton-y2k10-apocalypse-narrowly-averted.ars
I really need to get my Newton 2100 out and apply the patch - I now have my PowerMac 7500 set up as a dock for the Newton(s).
http://arstechnica.com/apple/news/2009/06/impending-newton-y2k10-apocalypse-narrowly-averted.ars
I really need to get my Newton 2100 out and apply the patch - I now have my PowerMac 7500 set up as a dock for the Newton(s).
Saturday, July 04, 2009
Sunday, June 21, 2009
Awesome birding at Flynn Road
I spent Saturday morning bird-watching with the BAWA crew at Flynn Road (The Lakes). I added seven birds to my life list, taking the total to 184. Here are the new additions:
- Elegant Parrot (Neophema elegans);
- Dusky Woodswallow (Artamus cyanopterus);
- Yellow-plumed Honeyeater (Lichenostomus ornatus);
- Crested (Western) Shrike-tit (Falcunculus leucogaster);
- Restless Flycatcher (Myiagra inquieta);
- Varied Sittella (Daphoenositta chrysoptera);
- Hooded Robin (Melanodryas cucullata).
It rained on and off for most of the morning but it was definitely worth it. While we could only locate a female Hooded Robin, close examination of the photographs confirmed it's identity. This means I have now seen all five robins that frequent the south-west of Australia. The Crested Shrike-tit and the Restless Flycatcher were seen in close proximity near the spot we stopped for morning tea. With the assistance of Steve I located a group of Varied Sittellas working the bark of a tree over and got some very good views (and some photos that, while not brilliant, confirm the identity).
Thursday, June 11, 2009
Friday, June 05, 2009
New to the list
Over the last week or so I have added three new birds to my life-list:
- Rufous Treecreeper (Climacteris rufa) - seen on the Wungong/Bungendore BirdsWA walk - thanks to those who found it;
- Western Thornbill (Acanthiza inornata) - I have seen these before but I can now reliably identify them thanks to John Graff;
- Horsfield's Bronze-Cuckoo (Chalcites basalis) - I found a single bird on the beach at Karratha - it was either exhausted or hiding from birds of prey as it was content to let me approach quite close.
Saturday, May 23, 2009
Track layout complete (for the time being)
After many hours of tinkering the track layout of my N-gauge model railway is complete. The new sections aren't powered yet but a few hours with the soldering iron should sort that out. I have also taken the opportunity to add some extra lighting.

The layout features:
- 11 turn outs (or points) - all are Peco electrofrog;
- 7 sidings (of varying lengths, 5 can be isolated to park locomotives);
- 3 tunnel mouths (1 double width, 2 single);
- 2 station platforms (may be more to come);
- 3 "loop" paths.
Thursday, May 21, 2009
Package from Hattons
This is the package from Hattons. The order was placed on 01/05/2009, it was packed in the UK on 07/05/2009 and it arrived in Perth (Australia) on 12/05/2009. Everything was intact and exactly as I ordered. This was a test order to see how things went - I will be ordering some more significant stuff from them sometime soon.
Tuesday, May 05, 2009
Thursday, April 30, 2009
Dynamics of birding
I find it amusing how it will often take me a long time to find a particular bird for the first time, yet once I have found it I seem to find them everywhere. This has happened with:
- Australasian Pipits (saw my first near Dampier recently, have now seen them 2 minutes from the office in an area I had looked before);
- Western Spinebills (first seen in Pinnaroo a few years back, we now have a family of them frequenting the backyard);
- Australian Reed-Warblers (seen first on a BAWA walk, now I see them in the reeds everywhere);
- Brown Honeyeaters (for years I thought they were small Singing Honeyeaters);
- Common Greenshanks (seen first on a BAWA walk, now I see them all the time in Dampier).
Sunday, April 26, 2009
Help name my layout
My N-gauge model train layout is progressing well. I spent a few hours tonight wiring block switches and covering foam with plaster-of-paris strips for the tunnel section. The layout is predominantly 1970s-1980s British diesel but also tends to have anything else that catches my eye...
I think the layout needs a name (most others around the place, especially those on the web, are named). Therefore, if you are reading this (I think at least a few people read this?) and have a suggestion please comment. Thanks!
Friday, April 24, 2009
Progress?
Monday, April 13, 2009
A few new birds for the list
- Australasian Pipit (Anthus novaeseelandiae), seen in the Dampier and Karratha area;
- Horsfield's Bushlark (Mirafra javanica), seen in the Dampier and Karratha area;
- Purple-crowned Lorikeet (Glossopsitta porphyrocephala), seen at both Gnowangerup and Wagin;
The list is now at 173 174.
Sunday, March 22, 2009
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