Monthly Archives: August 2015

Mirror Mirror on the wall who’s the cleanest of them all?

Hi, and welcome!

These funny little guys are called “Noisy Miners” and are native to Australia.

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They are not to be confused with the brown Common or Indian Myna birds which were brought to Australia 1862 and released into Melbourne to control insect pests in market gardens.

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Even though they were not successful at this, they were taken from Melbourne to many other places in Australia, including north Queensland. In 1883 it was thought, (thought being the operative word), that they would control insect pests of sugar cane particularly plague locusts and cane beetles. How did that go for them? Not real well. Common Myna’s are now found all down the east and southern coasts of Australia where they have become a pest as the drive out the native birds and eat up their natural food. But enough of the Indian or Common Myna. The Noisy Miners are the subject of this blog.

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The Noisy Miners are endearing little guys and even though they are not particularly attractive they make up for it in entertainment value and personality.

On the Quiet Side of the Great Lake there a lots of Noisy Miners. Especially this particular little guy, I call him Neville and he appeared in a feature role in my last book. Neville is a particularly clean bird and has taken exclusive ownership of our bird bath. He loves to bathe, and he does so frequently. We’ve seen him dive in 14 times in succession! That’s his record to date.

And yes, he actually dives from the side of the bird bath!

PREPARING

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DIVING

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FREESTYLE

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BREAST STROKE

swimming swimming

PERFECT RECOVERY

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THEN A NICE PLACE TO DRY OUT ON THE CLOTHESLINE

PREPARING FOR THE NEXT DIVE

Quite often he will make a sweeping dive from the clothesline right into the bird bath. Very athletic!

AND OF COURSE THE BIRD BATH IS A GREAT PLACE TO TEACH THE KIDS TO SWIM!

TEACHING THE KIDS3_001

I’d love to hear about the crazy antics of the birds where you live. Leave me a message!

Have a great weekend,

Marilyn

“If we could talk to the animals!”

“Just ask the animals, and they will teach you.
Ask the birds of the sky, and they will tell you.
8 Speak to the earth, and it will instruct you.
Let the fish in the sea speak to you….
For ..the life of every living thing is in his hand,
Job 12:8-10 NIV

I have no doubt God loves His creation, just as he loves us, and my premise for the Tales from a Lake series, is that the birds and animals also recognise and know their Creator. A stretch perhaps, but who knows?

There is an order God has set in His creatures on this earth (including man). We are born to parents who raise us, we learn to fend for ourselves and survive, we live for a purpose even to succeed and flourish. We remain a part of a family (regardless of who our family members are!) and we mostly start a family of our own (no disrespect to those who choose not to). And so the pattern continues until our time on earth is done.

Magpies fascinate me as they are very diligent in the raising of their offspring. They are the one native bird that feels at completely at home around humans. They wander our gardens as though they own them. On the Quiet Side of the Great Lake they are so friendly that you can walk right up to them and they won’t fly away. (I guess they know us and trust us, just like in real life!) So when they have new babies we become very aware. Initially it is the cries of the chicks in the nest, followed by the parents teaching their fledglings to find their food and survive on their own.

Mostly they get it. But there was one little magpie who caught my attention. It seemed to take weeks and weeks. He constantly chased after his mother squawking to be fed. It became entertainment to us as we watched his antics. I had to ask myself, ‘what was wrong with Junior Magpie’, that he couldn’t seem to find his own food. I sifted through the ‘what-ifs?’, and then an anecdote from a friend brought it all together and The Tale of Junior Magpie was born.

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To make the story more impacting I created Junior to be the son of Matthew Magpie, the central character of the Tales from a Lake series, who was appointed by the Great Creator, Himself to keep order on the Quiet Side among the bird life. The Quiet Side had become a place of peace and love where bird life, human folk and four legged friends all “looked out for each other”. It was a place of healing where hurting creatures came to mend and recover.

However, to Matthew and his life-partner Iris who saw themselves as role models and mentors to many of the others of their breed, it became a dilemma. But of course all is well that ends well. The book is on sale online in the Amazon Kindle store for $1.99 US and $2.68 AU.

I’d love to hear of your magpie experiences, good or bad.

Leave me a message!

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Don’t you just love pelicans!

Pelican head DAP_Glamour3I just love pelicans! My first book was about a pelican, Roger over and out.

I find it awesome when I consider the following facts about these intricately created birds.

“Pelicans are not capable of sustained flapping flight, but can remain in the air for 24 hours, covering hundreds of kilometres. They are excellent soarers and can use thermals to rise to considerable altitudes. Flight at 1,000m is common, and heights of 3 000 m have been recorded. By moving from one thermal to the next, pelicans can travel long distances with a minimum of effort, reaching air speeds of up to 56 km/hour.”

Wouldn’t you love to be able to do that? What incredible sights they must see!pelican soaring_DAP_Glamour2

 

You might ask how such a large bird can get off the ground? Well, according to those who study the breed, pelicans have an extremely light skeleton, weighing less than 10% of their total body weight.

Sited 22 Aug 2015 http://www.birdsinbackyards.net/species/Pelecanus-conspicillatus

Birds must be lightweight to fly, so have evolved very lightweight hollow bones. The structure of their bones resembles honeycomb, making them very strong but also very light. http://www.birdsinbackyards.net/birds/Bird-Anatomy-How-do-birds-fly

Considering these statistics is it little wonder I was led to write about a        globe-trotting or globe soaring Australian pelican, who had spent his life flying from ship to ship. Whether it be a cruise ship or navy ship, Roger was known by all on his route, and wherever he went he was fussed over and treated to tasty delights. (Primarily fish!)

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With such an interesting and energetic life it was little wonder that as he grew older and began running out of puff, he found himself faced with a dilemma. He needed to find a nice quiet place to retire.

So began his long search for the Quiet Side of the Great Lake.

Being an avid photographer, pelican behaviour fascinates me. They can be very comical in appearance with their unusual shape and features or quite regal.

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(This photo I have put through a cartoon filter to give it an illustration-type effect), but standing like that, he looks like an old “grandfather” pelican. So cute!

Pelicans can find the most amazing places to perch. Places peculiar only to them.

pelican on poleA place for quiet, reflective thought and “far away from the madding crowd!” to quote the title of a movie.
Pelicans on a light

(Above) A place to visit with selective friends.

catching up on gossip

Or the community meeting place to catch up on lake gossip. I’m sure no one could get paid enough to clean that jetty!

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Last of all, if you’re lucky you can get a free snack if you are fast. Pelican Feeding is a tourist attraction at the little seaside town called ‘The Entrance’ on the ocean side of the lake. Not only do the pelicans get fed each day, the Australian Seabird Rescue also looks out for their welfare.

 

Australian Seabird Rescue is a grass-roots community group with a passion for coastal wildlife rescue and conservation. – See more at: http://seabirdrescue.org/#sthash.nILympUj.dpuf
These amazing people rescue and protect shorebirds, marine turtles and raise awareness about the human impact on the environment.
This majestic fellow (below) visits a neighbour of ours. He walks right into their garden and stands at the foot of the steps waiting for his hand out. They have long memories!
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I would love to hear from you and your stories and experiences with these amazing birds.

Leave me a message!

Marilyn

Let’s begin at the beginning!

Welcome all wildlife lovers and a big welcome to all my Aussie friends,

Thanks for checking out my blog!

2015 has been my debut year as a children’s writer. After a career in the nursing profession ending as the administrator of a service reaching across four hospitals and just short of a thousand beds, I have found breathing space to further a cause God laid on my heart.

To date my books are all a part of a series. The series is entitled Tales from a Lake. All are available on the Amazon Kindle website at minimal cost. Check out the covers below. So far there are three books in the series, with a fourth in production. They are educational, as I have endeavoured to keep the characters as close to nature and in their natural environment. Whilst they contain a Christian theme, they also contain principles that teach young children values and virtues, elements that are often missing in today’s society.

     

Just as my characters do in The Tales from a Lake series, I too live on the Quiet Side of the Great Lake. When my husband and I moved to our lake frontage fifteen years ago, my heart was moved by the beauty of this place and the birds, four legged friends and the human folk who live there. I was struck by the fact that there was such an order to the wildlife so similar to our own, which could only be attributed to God, the Great Creator’s awesome design and engineering.

As we do, I could see no reason why these creatures could not be aware of our Creator just as we are. From a child’s perspective everything is possible. The more bazaar the more instrigue. So from this origin the many Tales from a Lake stories were born. While these stories are crafted for children, my late mother who was suffering with Alzheimer’s Disease also enjoyed them. Some could say she was biased. But the simplicity of the stories and love incorporated in them is uplifting and simple.

The Tales from a Lake stories are a very different approach of creating the awareness of our Creator to young children making them appropriate to all denominations and religions who believe in the One True God.

All stories are inspired from real happenings around the lake and I can’t tell you what a privilege and a blessing it is to live life seeing these stories evolve.

Watching the bird families as they raise their offspring, seeing others who arrive having traveled across the oceans to our lake down under, some from New Guinea, some from as far away as Alaska, flying thousands of miles each year. It is also very precious to see relationships rise up between the human folk on the Quiet Side and God’s creatures – such as in The Tale of Pamela Possum.

Together, bird life, four legged friends and human folk alike we face the same trials of storms and floods. “We look out for each other!”

Below is an illustration from Tales from a Lake Book 1, entitled Roger, Over and Out! But more about him next time.

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