It's not often anyone sees an Orange-bellied Parrot, especially when they're not really looking. But sometimes, mundane things like stopping for a cuppa can lead to extraordinary sights...
The little parrot looked unfamiliar so Lindy Frost snapped a few photos. She wondered, briefly, if it was an Orange-bellied Parrot. But no, she thought, ‘They’re just too rare’.
The little parrot looked unfamiliar so Lindy Frost snapped a few photos. She wondered, briefly, if it was an Orange-bellied Parrot. But no, she thought, ‘They’re just too rare’.
As it happens, the Port
Macquarie school secretary, who was on a caravan holiday with her husband, had
seen and photographed the first, documented OBP of the 2012 winter.
The Frosts were one week
into their six-week trip through Victoria and South Australia . It was
mid-morning and overcast as David (‘not a birder at all’) lowered the car’s
tailgate and took out their camp stove. As he made morning tea, Lindy went for
her customary stroll, looking for birds.
‘It was fairly plain green
and there didn’t seem to be much in the way of blue on its wings or other
identifying features at all,’ she laughs. ‘The local bird brochure had
Blue-winged Parrot in it, so I thought that must be it!’ Lindy watched the parrot for a minute or two before it flew off.
It wasn’t until the Frosts
returned home that investigations began. Lindy’s father, Graeme Catt, and Alan
Morris (NSW Birding-aus) sent the photos to Chris Tzaros (Birdlife Australia ), and
an identification was made in early July.
The bird – No. 351 on
Lindy Frost’s lifelist – was seen on 11 April. It’s the inaugural OBP record for
Airey’s Inlet, the first OBP sighting of 2012, and a rare find, she says, with
understatement, she was ‘just really pleased to see’.