Posts Tagged ‘birds’
Scary noises…
I guess to write a book you need some sort of imagination.
Imagination is something I have and have had since I was very little.
I was encouraged to have imagination – my Nana Parnell would tell me stories – stories that came from her head, without pictures or books. I had to guess what her characters looked like and think about what she was saying so I could imagine the setting. Often these stories would play in my head, like mini movies – I could see “Joe the Perentie, a big, lethargic goanna, walking slooowly along the bank of Todd River, before he flopped down to rest under the shade of a ghost gum.” Oh yeah, my Nana told The. Best. Stories. Ever! I miss her stories.
I can remember lying in my bed at night too scared to open the window because I was sure there was someone outside who would murder me. He’s coming for me! I would tell my despairing mother.
Yep. Bound to happen in a tiny town that has about five hundred people living in it. Good one, Fleur.
Anyway, I digress. Well not really. I have a thing about noises that go ‘bump in the night.’ I don’t like them.
This noise didn’t go bump, but went ‘Coo-hoooo. Coo-hoooo’ Now obviously living on a farm it is likely to be an owl or some kind of wildlife and yes, it sounded like an owl, but the point was I hadn’t HEARD it before. I didn’t like it because I hadn’t HEARD it before!
‘What is that?’ I asked one night after I’d listened to it for about the third night in a row.
‘Owl,’ the boss replied.
‘Doesn’t sound like an owl,’ I countered.
‘Owl,’ the boss said sternly, knowing my capability for turning a dog trotting down the path into a mob of cows thundering towards the house to eat us whole.
I didn’t believe him.
The next day I went searching and couldn’t find any evidence of an owl, anywhere. (Yes, yes. I can hear you saying it was day time… Not the point.)
Still wasn’t convinced it was an owl.
I kept searching – there had been heaps of pigeons bathing themselves in the sprinkler water and I saw one fly into a tea-tree. Then I heard the noise again – knew it wasn’t a bloody owl!
These two babies are what I found when I went searching and I’m CONVINCED it was their mum talking to the babies so THEY didn’t scared at night!
Specky Visitors

These Black Cockies arrive suddenly and leave just as quickly! One day the pine trees are quiet, the cattle are grazing without a care in the world… and then suddenly… “SQUARK, squark, squark’! They’ve arrived.
I’m sure these attention seekers have got no idea how loud their call is and how frightening it is for the stock when they fly in mobs of fifty or so over the sheep or cattle, yelling at the tops of their voice! It’s not unusual to see a mob of cattle suddenly take off across a paddock with the Black Cockies above them.

They’ve been back here about three weeks, talking, squawking, and picking at the pine cones, either on the trees or ground. Anthony jokingly calls them drought birds. They were here heaps last year when it was dry and should’ve been raining… they’ve appeared again as the lack of rain begins to bite once more.
Apparently Black Cockies aren’t supposed to frequent the east side of Esperance, so we’ve been documenting their arrival and departures as often as we can… I think I’ve just proved their on our farm wouldn’t you say?

