
Kangaroos hop down my street every day or so. They eat your lawn, veggie patch and anything else that takes their fancy. They are environmentally friendly and let vegetation regenerate.
The king kangaroo would stand at over two metres high and would kill you if you got too close. People around here hate them and will shoot them at any opportunity. Dickheads around here love to run them down in their four wheel drives, makes me sick at times. Roadkill, what for? Fucking nothing.
I can’t eat them as once I got really sick but the details are gory so I won’t go into it except to say that it wasn’t the kangaroo steak that made me sick.
When it’s drought I leave water out for them but I don’t tell my neighbours as the shotguns would come from me. They eat so little compared to sheep and cattle. It’s the sheep and cattle that are ruining the river flats.
In the last week I’ve seen, snakes, turtles, roos, echidnas, wallabies and goannas. After 35 years in Adelaide I’m now the lucky one. I can look outside my side door and watch Rosellas, King Parrots, Major Mitchells, White Cockies, Wheat Birds, Kookaburras and have Sea Eagles, Owls, Hawks and other birds that stay high up in the gum trees. The only bird I don’t like is the Koel bird that has an awful cry and is a cuckoo. The Koel bird comes down from Indonesia each summer and is a pain in the arse. Lays it’s eggs in the nest of honey eaters. The hatched chick eats the other eggs in the nest then keeps the parents feeding it till it flies home.
If I go down to the headland and can see whales going up and down the coast depending on the time of year, dolphins surfing and the local creek has flathead, bream, ducks and pelicans.
Geez, I’m lucky and I never realised it.
Written and authorised by Mark at a town near you.
Lovely to find so many at our local. Popping in result of sort of falling in. Speaking of curlews, the racket they make where I live is sometimes blood curdling. Sometimes the kookaburras laugh like crazy birds at them. Crazy-happy, kookaburras. I have a view of mountains and trees. Life is ok.
☺ Shoe
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Great to see you’re still in one piece.
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It’s been a bit of a battle. Thanks Big M. I’ve changed my place and my space. I’m a full-time University student. I got through the first semester (incredibly difficult circumstances!) Just getting used enough to the pace to consider I might get through another.
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I’d be shocked if Skip hopped down our street, though there are wallabies and echidnas in the bushland not far from here. The bush turkey though is a regular visitor. I chat with the birds on my daily walk, magpies, sulphur crested cockies, galahs, rainbow lorikeets and honey eaters as well as noisy mynas. Kookaburras, the occasional kingfisher and butcherbirds. Unfortunately blue tongues don’t last long with Kiki the resident greyhound.
Last week Mrs A and I escaped to Canberra for a couple of days. We went to Tidbinbilla nature reserve. The Kangaroos quite lazy, Cars didn’t seem to bother them, stuck their heads up noted the car and then went back to what it was doing. A black swan just kept building its nest and let us watch from a metre or two away, its mate came over to say hello.
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That’s lovely.
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And lovely to see you here shoe. It’s been too long.
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Just lovely.
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Thank you.
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We were just saying as much on Thursday. Sat about watching Rosellas, King Parrots, Sulfur Crested Cockatoos, Magpies and Kookaburras, all feeding and taking turns in the bird bath. We get a little grass parrot here, as well. Dunno the name. The neighbour saw a pair of roos last week as well.
Blue Tongues are pretty tame, and the occasional echidna wanders through. We regularly see whales migrating, but dolphin are pretty commonplace.
As my neighbour always says. “It’s great going on holiday, but home is like a bloody paradise.”
All this seven kilometers from the CBD!
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Isn’t it crazy, early settlers brought in all these introduced animals, and now they sling off because the native animals dare to eat what they are entitled to!
Hah, now I know that a Storm bird is really a Koel. But, what is a wheat bird?
Do you have curlews where you live? The first time I heard one (at night), I was sure a murder was taking place!
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Yes we do get curlews and I’m not sure where I got wheat birds from. I will look them up and post a link.
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Can’t find them Sister but they are a small to medium size bird, greyish brown and eat insects. Used to have them in SA as well and they have an awful call. Next time I speak to the missus I will ask her as she has the bird book.
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They are wattle birds not wheat birds.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_wattlebird
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Thanks, Marco.
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