Monday 23 November 2020

Pretty flowers

This is possibly a bit of a stretch for 'wildlife' as all these plants are in gardens and are not growing wild anywhere in the area.  I'll justify it on the grounds that 

  • they offer food to wildlife;
  • they are pretty; and
  • I set the rules!
All the photos were taken in the Angophora Drive - Stingray Point area.  The first few are of Kangaroo Paws (Anigozanthos sp).




The next are various varieties of Grevillea sp.





Wednesday 18 November 2020

Footmobiling the clifftops

 On 17 November the Footmobiles decided to walk from Quarry Beach along the clifftops to Pebbly Beach.  According to my eBird app that was 2km each way.

The regrowth is now quite high.  I'm not sure quite what this grassy material is: I have heard it called 'sedge' but it didn't satisfy the mnemonic "sedges have edges".
The Melaleuca armillaris is sprouting, in some cases, from the lignotubers.  However it looks unlikely that it will form the monculture forest that was there: possibly a good thing.  I suspect it will take several years for the burnt trunks to fall, and longer for them to decay.
A gully down to the sea, populated with Cyathea australis tree ferns.
Looking West, towards Secret Beach.
Looking East - again towards Secret Beach.
There were some interesting flowers along the way.  This is a Fringe Lily Thysanotus sp.  I suspect it is T. tuberosus  based on the woodland habitat and the number of flowers per plant.
After months of ground covering vegetative growth the Kennedia prostrata is keeping the flowers happening for a good long while.
A solitary Caladenia carnea growing under a Solanum bush.
The shape of things to come!  I spotted several spikes of Dipodium sp (Hyacinth Orchid) growing along the track.  A couple of weeks at least off flowering.
This Lomandra longifolia has gone to seed.
Lomatia ilicifolia in flower
The Kangaroo apples (Solanum aviculare) have been showing big green berries (a la Granny Smith) for a long while.  I am waiting for them to go orange or red (Cox's Orange Pippin?)!
We were accompanied by one Pippa.  A very game little lady!

Someone had been creative adding twigs to span the gap in this stump. 
There were a good number of flies, which appeared to like the Footmobiles t-shirts.  To save you counting there are 26 in this image.
Another nuisance was this sign.  There is no reason whatsoever for this sign.  All works have been completed (very well completed, one has to say).  Presumably "they" have forgotten where they put out the signs: in some circles the track is known as the "Bureaucracy Track".


Tuesday 17 November 2020

Various sightings

 This is a grab bag of various things seen over 15 and 16 November. 

I begin with some land art seen on the middle of the three beaches walk, below Point Difficult, which we did as the tide was low on the 15th so the walk was possible without abseiling (or swimming).




We now advance to 16 November.  When we returned from our morning walk (a tad unpleasant as the temperature - at 0815 - was close to 30C) there was a large flock of Tree Martins swooping over the paddock opposite our house.  I took my camera out to try to get a photo.  Nice House Sparrow!
Nice Red-bellied Black Snake seen at the bottom of the paddock!
The best that I could manage of the hirundines.  A Welcome Swallow on the left and a Tree Martin - trust me, I'm a doctor's father - on the ground to the right.
We had noted this cute little family of Australian Wood Ducks on the walk.
On the afternoon of the 16th we went to check the rock pools at Bastion Point.  I am pretty sure this is something of the animal persuasion, but iNaturalist has taken a punt at 'Life'!
The next few images are of Sea Hares and/or their egg masses.

There are a LOT of egg masses.  This was the greatest colection.

I have in the past decided these are sea squirts, which seems to be the default ID for colourful blobs attached t rocks!
Bastion Point is a hotspot for Eastern Reef Egret but it is unusual to see 2 together.



Sunday 15 November 2020

Stinkhorns as climax vegetation?

 As this damp season progresses we have been finding several colonies of stinkhorn fungi.  Most of these have been identified as the relatively small Anemone Stinkhorn (Aseroe rubra).

The colony we see most often is next to our drive where there have been a couple of 'outbreaks' of about 6 fruiting bodies at a time.  However about 250 metres down the road we found a colony of at least 25 fruiting bodies.  The extent of this colony is shone by the red box in this image.

More recently a much larger fruiting body appeared near our drive.  That has been identified as 

Clathrus archeri (Devils Fingers).

My foot is shown for scale: I measured the arms as approximately 12 cm long from the stipe.
The size of the specimen was part of the identification by a guru from iNaturalist.com.  They were also able to assess the presence of the gleba (ie the brown gooze) on the arms.

Saturday 14 November 2020

November 1985 was soggy

This month is looking to conform to a La Nina pattern with a fair bit of rain.  By the morning of 14 November we are up to 47 mm, thus exceeding the monthly total for 11 of the 40 years for which I have records.  On looking back the outstanding November was 1985 when Mallacoota scored 340 mm.

The daily falls really got going towards the end of the month:

The second chart shows the cumulative fall through the month.
For interest I compared the falls at Mallacoota with those for Gabo Island.  This suggests that on the 9th and 26th the rain came in thunderstorms that missed the Island.