Showing posts with label peacocks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label peacocks. Show all posts

Friday, 18 September 2015

Peacocks and other hungry animals

I had hungry visitors this morning at breakfast time. Its hot. 35 degrees at least during the days now, although still 20ish at night. The tourists are just about all gone to cooler climates. In fact this next week will see us beginning to close down parts of the park for off season maintenance.

Anyway the relevance of the lack of tourists is that they feed the wildlife. Some of them buy food for the wallabies and as a result the local population congregate here for the dry. And I suspect breed up as a result of the abundance. The local birds feast on scraps and the feral pigs haunt the tip.

Peacock and his haram foraging


I'm as guilty as the next person of tossing scraps for the pet wallabies that have been rescued and raised here. In fact I have been known to have to leap out of the door to recover my veggie scraps after absentmindedly chucking them out when we are not in fact parked at Mataranka. I must look a sight scrabbling in the dirt with a plastic bag in my hand.


Wallaby checking us out


However the impact of the sudden loss of food sources was driven home to me when I had to almost shove aside five peahens and a peacock this morning to get to my outdoor kitchen to boil the kettle. They were not impressed that there was no food in my hands and honked rudely at me.

Excuse me. I need to get to kettle.
I wonder even more as I am woken at night by hungry wallabies tearing at and eating ...yes eating....the cardboard boxes stacked outside the door ready for the rubbish truck. As the year goes on this will become more common. The birds, peafowl, and 'roos forage through everything looking for food to keep them alive until the wet comes. Sometimes the annex looks like the floor of a teenager's bedroom.

Just visiting. What's for breakfast. 
Yet .........   I can't bring myself to bin my scraps when K's favourite baby, the one that appears every year to get a scratch the moment we park the caravan, turns up to share my pear core and banana peal. At least I get a good breakfast each morning.

Coffee, fruit and nuts. My breakfast of choice



A moral dilemma indeed


Cheers Sue






A Ferg on the Move


Sunday, 13 September 2015

Animal Stars



This post is dedicated to the animals we have encountered along the way. Memories of places are attached to the animals we saw there.


Giant clam and turtle at Cape Laveque in far north Western Australia.

 
 
Horse and foal on the Roper Highway in Northern Territory. These horses are descendants of those used on Elsey Station. We see these regularly on the way to Jilkmiggan.


Black tailed wallabies on the islands in Lake Argyle, near Kununurra in the Kimberly region of Western Australia.


Johnson Crocodile, also known as a fresh water crocodile at Geikie Gorge National Parl.

Peacock visiting K for breakfast in Darwin. These birds are in just about every caravan park we visit. Not native to Australia however. They roost high up in the gum trees at night away from feral cats and dogs. The delightful honk works like an alarm clock in the morning.

 
 
Baby Cherrapin, a large thin claw prawn in a creek near Derby Western Australia.

 


Geese at Sandfire Western Australia. This place has been burnt down several times. A testament to the tenacity of outback dwellers.

 
 
 
 And my absolute favourite has to be the magnificent sight of a pod of female whales and their young at the head of the Great Australian Bight in South Australia.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
I'm sure there are even more in the archives.
 
 
 
Cheers Sue
 
A Ferg on the Move.