The rainbow lorikeets are in the lilly pilly and enjoying the fruit that is just emerging. However they sneakily get in on the sunflower seeds as our geriatric cockatoos are becoming a regular. We think there are two of them, one a lot worse then the other. Gone is its sulphur crest, its feathers very sparse on its head and front. They do live to a very ripe old age and I guess this is one of them. We note that they seem to be stronger in recent days and the other birds are being kind to them and letting them feed.
The kookaburras come in at 500pm. I could set my clock by them. One flies in and then the other. One is porky, if ever a bird can be described as such, and has pretty blue feathers, the other leaner, perhaps a young one. They love their mince mixed with insects and yolk, which I specially prepare for them following the advice of my bird guru Paul Perrett. The cockatoos will come in at varying times in the day and play with the silver ties to the tablecloth. They delight in taking them off one by one and then scrunching up my tablecloth. Usually I muscle in on them just before they complete their little act of rebellion.
At various times of the day the sounds of my neighbour’s children playing imaginative games, Dougall barking and the sounds of butcher birds on the wire, now a little wary of approaching as the Kookaburras are higher in the pecking order.
Such is the richness of life and sounds we need in our lives at the moment.







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