Tag Archives: Wooli

North Queensland in winter

Frilled Lizard (Chlamydosaurus kingii), Abergowrie State Forest.

This month I made a quick work trip to photograph some National Park infrastructure projects in the area between Townsville and Cairns, in northern Queensland.

I travelled about 1,800kms in a week, and visited a lot of reserves. My reason for being there was mainly to take photos of things like boardwalks and tracks, and you can’t do much wildlife photography when travelling so quickly. I did see some great critters, including a lot of new bird species (for my personal list), but can’t tell you what they were really, as I left my binoculars at home — the sign of a true professional birdwatcher and naturalist. Grrr.

It rained for the first two days, which made for some magical moments sitting in the wet tropical rainforest listening to the many new birds (that I could not see). I also encountered a Frilled Lizard in the middle of a State Forest road. I grabbed him and took him off the road before placing him on the side of a tree, and got my camera ready to take a pic. This works fine with placid southern Bearded Dragons, but I’d forgotten how fiesty these northern dragons are supposed to be, and all I saw through the viewfinder was the lizard leaping off the tree straight at my head, all teeth, claws, scales and frill … I guess (something) like what it would be like to be chased by a Tryrannosaurus rex … well, you get the idea. After pursuing me through the scrub like a demented, bouncing wind-up toy, attempting to bite my knee-caps off, he calmed down long enough for me to get a few shots. Reptiles — critters with lots of character and attitude!

I was also captivated by the tropical mangroves. The boardwalk at Edmund Kennedy National Park offers a superb ground-level tour of a range of wonderful coastal habitats. Crabs clicked and popped and Noisy Pittas foraged in the patches of melaleuca and eucalypt scrub between mangrove expanses. More mosquitoes than I’ve ever seen, and I got eaten alive staying in one spot trying to photograph a Pitta.

For more photos from my brief trip north, visit my new “Tropical North” gallery, under the NEW IMAGES section of my website.

Broadwater Creek, Abergowrie State Forest.

Grey Goshawk (Accipiter novaehollandiae). Bromfield Swamp Road.

Forest Kingfisher (Todiramphus macleayii), Abergowrie State Forest.

Jourama Falls, Paluma Range National Park, early morning.

Edmund Kennedy National Park.

Noisy Pitta (Pitta versicolor). Edmund Kennedy National Park.

Mangrove roots, Edmund Kennedy National Park.

Cairns Birdwing (Ornithoptera euphorion).

Mangrove reflections, Marrja Botanical Walk, Cape Tribulation National Park.

Pheasant Coucal (Centropus phasianinus). Innisfail canefields.

Grey-headed Robin (Heteromyias albispecularis), Mount Hypipamee National Park.

Wooli fires — one year on

In September 2009 a large fire ripped through Yuraygir National Park, on the New South Wales coast east of Grafton. The town of Wooli was in the centre of it all. Images I took of the fire were published in Wildlife Australia in March 2010 (below, and see archived blog post from November 2009).

Wooli fires 2009

Wooli – a coastal town surrounded by fire, September 2009. Wildlife Australia Magazine

I revisited Wooli in July 2010, and took the opportunity to take a look at some of the scrub that the fire had affected. The bush was recovering, although it was clear that such a hot fire had killed many canopy trees in some areas. After recent rain it was interesting to see the diverse array of ground plants, wildflowers, fungi and orchids.

Before and after fires

Eucalypt woodland almost one year after the fire.

Epicormic growth on brush-box.

Banksia seedlings and grass-trees.

Most grass-trees survived.

Banksias produced many seedlings, with older plants in flower after recent rains.

For more images of the fire in September, as well as a new gallery of images taken in the same bushland in July 2010, see the “Photostories” section of my website.

Wooli dust and fires

In September 2009 we spent two weeks at Wooli, a small town on the northern New South Wales coast.

It was a dramatic taste of things to come with changes in our climate. First to arrive was an immense dust storm, one that covered the entire eastern coast of Australia. The dust gradually headed east out to the Pacific Ocean.

A week of fire followed, with a wildfire burning south east through much of the heathlands of Yuraygir National Park that surround the town of Wooli.

Swamp wallaby killed by somke/fire, Wooli, 2009