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| Flora types at Irongate Photo: M. Simmons |
Where: Behind the State School at Biddeston.
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| Neil Mahoney’s seat of knowledge Photo: M. Simmons |
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| Flora types at Irongate Photo: M. Simmons |
Where: Behind the State School at Biddeston.
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| Neil Mahoney’s seat of knowledge Photo: M. Simmons |
CLUB MEETING: 7 pm, Friday 3 October 2025
Where: Jessie's Cottage, Murphy's Creek.
CLUB MEETING: 7 pm, Friday 05 September 2025
St. Anthony’s Community Centre, Memory Street, Toowoomba. The speaker's presentation is followed by official business and supper.
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| An image of comet C/1995 O1 (Hale-Bopp), taken on April 04, 1997 Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported |
The planned outing to Goombungee had to be cancelled because of the amount
of rain during the night. Instead, we were to meet at the James Byrne end of
the Highfields Falls Bushland. Ten members and a
visitor arrived by 9 a.m. on a sunny but cold morning.
It was an easy walk with a chorus of birds to keep us company. The stops made on the route were mainly to try to spot birds which were flitting about, quite often high in the canopy. These spots were where the sun broke through, as well as at the top of the waterfall, and again at the bottom of the Falls. Recent rains ensured that there was a good flow of water. Opposite the descent to the bottom of the Falls was a tree where Powerful Owls used to roost, but there was no sign of any owl, nor any giveaway signs on the ground to indicate they might have been there.
One of the non-avian things that caught our attention was some large galls on a quite small wattle tree (see photo). It was not the gall that poet Gerard Manley Hopkins was referring to in these few lines:
But
it is a bit of a curse for the wattle tree. The gall is a reaction to insects such as mites, thrips
and wasps, laying eggs in the plant tissue, and their larvae release chemicals
(like cecidotoxins) that stimulate abnormal cell growth, forming the
gall. The gall is essentially the tree’s defensive response - a kind of
botanical scar tissue - triggered by foreign substances or organisms. It walls
off the invader, but in doing so, creates a nutrient-rich shelter that
ironically benefits the pest. Gall shapes vary on different Acacias. [For more information on galls: gall
history in Aus.pdf.]
Straw-necked Ibis; Pacific Baza (probable sighting); Brown Quail; White-headed Pigeon; Galah; Sulphur-crested Cockatoo; Rainbow Lorikeet; Little Lorikeet; King Parrot; Pale-headed Rosella; Laughing Kookaburra; Black-faced Cuckoo-shrike; Eastern Yellow Robin; Grey Shrike-thrush; Grey Fantail; Eastern Whipbird; Superb Fairy-wren; White-browed Scrubwren; Brown Thornbill (probable sighting); Varied Sittella; White-throated Treecreeper; Noisy Miner; Lewin’s Honeyeater; White-naped Honeyeater; Brown Honeyeater; Mistletoebird; Spotted Pardalote; Red-browed Firetail; Olive-backed Oriole; Australian Figbird.
CLUB MEETING:
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| Latham's Snipe Photo: Jason Girvan by CC BY-SA 3.0 |
7 pm, Friday 1 August 2025 at
St. Anthony’s Community Centre, Memory Street, Toowoomba.![]() |
| Bird Beak Hakea Hakea orthorrhyncha |
Added information – There are
many different routes to travel to Glenmorgan with interesting stops along the
way. Some suggestions - Hugh Sawrey
Memorial Park Kogan, Caliguel Lagoon Condamine, Brigalow Creek Meandarra, Tara
Lagoon and many creek crossings with water.
Non members: please email toowoombafieldnaturalists@gmail.com for more information on accommodation and directions.
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| Lagoon on the way into Myall Park |
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| Myall Park entrance by the lagoon |
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| Mud map of key birding sites near Myall Park (not to scale) |
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| Rush-leaf Wattle Acacia juncifolia |
Where: Bottle Tree Park in the main street of Goombungee between George and Edward Streets. Car-pooling into high clearance vehicles is suggested.
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| Boronia inflexa |