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- Newsgroups: rec.birds
- Path: sparky!uunet!newsgate.watson.ibm.com!yktnews2.watson.ibm.com!yktnews!admin!mothra6!andrewt
- From: andrewt@watson.ibm.com (Andrew Taylor)
- Subject: Re: Bird watching at night
- Sender: news@watson.ibm.com (NNTP News Poster)
- Message-ID: <1993Jan22.152433.18046@watson.ibm.com>
- Date: Fri, 22 Jan 1993 15:24:33 GMT
- Disclaimer: This posting represents the poster's views, not necessarily those of IBM
- References: <josh.727641751@pogo>
- Nntp-Posting-Host: mothra6.watson.ibm.com
- Organization: IBM T.J. Watson Research Center
- Lines: 36
-
- In article <josh.727641751@pogo> josh@cqs.washington.edu (Josh Hayes) writes:
- >On a related question, has anyone had any success "jacklighting"
- >birds; that is, going out at night with a nice bright spotlight
- >and catching eyeshine?
-
- I've done this quite often in Australia. In forest, listening for calls and
- imitating calls/using tapes seems a much more efficient way of locating owls.
- but I have found various owls just by spotlight. Its pretty slow - maybe
- 1 owl for every 3-4 hours spotlighting (for me, others seem to do better)
- but mammals are more frequently seen.
-
- My favourite spot is in Royal National Park on Sydney's southern outskirts.
- There I've seen
-
- Tawny Frogmouth - usually siting low and lets you approach
- Boobook Owl - small Ninox owl
- Barking Owl - medium-sized Ninox owl (heard once)
- Powerful Owl - largest of the Ninox Hawk Owls, sometimes sitting on prey
- Sooty Owl - rare Tyto owl (heard several times but stayed out of spotlight)
- various sleeping passerines - often tucked so tightly into an a ball that they
- can't be identified. If you don't disturb the branch they on they
- will stayed tucked while you approach very closely
-
- Also 7 species of possum including 4 gliding species and various terrestrial
- mammals.
-
- I've been successful in finding Barn Owl spotlighing from a slowly moving
- car on roads through farmland near Sydney (seeing 4-6 in 2-3 hours again
- others seem to find more).
-
- In Africa driving quiet roads is favoured method of locating nightjars.
- They will sit on the road almost until the vehicle hits them, even at slow
- speeds. They will also allow themselves to be picked up which eases
- identification.
-
- Andrew Taylor
-