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Wild About My Garden

En tries in the Wild About My Garden Project are now in e-Book form. The link to download is on the Gallery page .

Wednesday, January 29, 2025

February activity details - Sunday 09 February 2025. Butterfly Farm and McGarvas Road, Grantham

CLUB MEETING: 7 pm, Friday 07 February 
St. Anthony’s Community Centre, Memory Street, Toowoomba 

Five speakers ‘from the floor’ on ‘Close Encounters of the Natural History Kind.’


CLUB OUTINGSunday 09 February 2025. Butterfly Farm and McGarvas Road, Grantham
$5.00 entry fee (cash only – no credit card availability) 

Time: 9.00am

Where to meet: James Norman Hedges Park at Helidon. This is the park on the left (northern) side of the Warrego Highway immediately before crossing Lockyer Creek at Helidon.

Description: This will allow birdwatchers time to wander around the creek before leaving at 9.30 am for the ‘Garden of Eden’ Butterfly Farm 6 kilometres from Helidon on Conners Road. There is a $5.00 entry fee (cash only – no credit card availability) to this peaceful sanctuary owned and run by Ray and Delphine Archer.

Please note - As butterflies are not active on cloudy and rainy days, this outing remains subject to change at short notice.  

On leaving the Butterfly Farm we will continue along Conners Road to McGarvas Road which rises high to a sandstone plateau. We will a property where the owners are enjoying a ‘tree change’ and happy for us to have lunch and wander around. There is much to see for those with limited mobility and a more strenuous walk down a creek for those so inclined. There is suitable access for all vehicles. 
Non-members: Please email us if you have any queries.

Level of Fitness: Activities to suit all levels.

What to Bring: suitable clothing and footwear for walking in the bush, sunscreen, insect repellant, water, morning tea and lunch, chair, and the usual naturalist stuff of your choice; binoculars, camera, field guides, notebook, etc.

November Outing Report - Glen Lomond Conservation Park, 03 November 2024

Hell Hole Falls with columnar basalt. 
Adapted from the TFNC December newsletter reports of M. Compton and B. Gundry

Our outing was a special day, one seemingly suspended in a kind of dreamtime. It was a glorious spring day in which to have an almost “Hanging Rock” timeless experience in Glen Lomond Conservation Park at the southern end of the escarpment.

We are all used to the indications of serious volcanic activity in the Toowoomba vicinity, especially obviously so with the flat-topped cone of Tabletop. But how about the other way round - a reverse cone down into the earth? For our November excursion we visited the very impressive mouth of a volcano in this park at the south-east corner of the eastern range. Here, we stood at the edge of this geological phenomenon and gazed deep into the funnel created when the boiling magma blew out of the depths and into the air. Giant basalt columns line the sides of the mouth, while a modest creek has cut a “V” in one side, trickling over as Hell Hole Creek and making its way to join Flagstone Creek. The ancient history of the area is palpable, and its impressive grandeur makes a great impact. 

Close by is an open area of grassland about the size of a cricket ground, with shelter sheds. Of course, the field nats set themselves up very comfortably in one of these and proceeded to enjoy the day “spaced out” in a naturalist kind of way. 

Some members set off for the walk to a waterfall deep within the park, returning with enthusiastic reports of the experience, but saying quite honestly that it wasn’t an easy walk. 

The “falls” occurred over exposed, hexagonal columnar basalt and the scatter of rocks of the plunge pool were likewise of basalt, but there was some softer material which initially was thought of a type of tuff. On further investigation it was a mass of matted biotic materials. Where there is water, there will be a living response. Here, plants, living and dead, clung to the moist basalt, creating a matted vegetative layer, in places only half a centimetre thick, but the more central masses may have been 10-20 centimetres thick. The entire mass was about 5-6 metres high at the apex and about three metres wide across the base. The entire moist biotic mass may have weighed over 1 tonne and looked something less than stable.

Meanwhile others, in the wont of Natters, scattered into the area adjacent to the shelter shed to enjoy their naturalizing.

Species List; Glen Lomond Park, Middle Ridge, Toowoomba (compiled by R. Hobson from members' observations)
Birds: Australian Brush-turkey, Wonga Pigeon, Crested Pigeon, Eastern Great Egret x 1 (overhead), Dollarbird, Peregrine Falcon x 1 (dead), Little Corella, Sulphur-crested Cockatoo, Rainbow Lorikeet, Scaly-breasted Lorikeet, Satin Bowerbird, White-throated Treecreeper, Superb Fairy-wren, Noisy Friarbird, Brown Honeyeater, Lewin’s Honeyeater, Noisy Miner, White-browed Scrubwren, Striated Thornbill, Black-faced Cuckoo-shrike, Common Cicadabird, Rufous Whistler, Grey Shrike-thrush, Eastern Whipbird, Pied Currawong, Australian Magpie, Spangled Drongo, Torresian Crow, Leaden Flycatcher, Eastern Yellow Robin, Mistletoebird, Silvereye Amphibians: Common Green Treefrog Litoria caerulea Reptiles (lizards): Scute-snouted Calyptotis Calyptotis scutirostrum, Lace Monitor Varanus varius Dragonflies and Damselflies: Australian Emperor Anax papuensis, Australian Emerald Hemicordulia australiae; Blue Skimmer Orthetrum caledonicum Grasshoppers and Crickets: Hedge Grasshopper Valanga irregularis, Field Cricket Teleogryllus commodus Cicadas: Black Tree Ticker Cicada Birrima varians Butterflies and Moths: Orchard Swallowtail Papilio a. aegeus, Chequered Swallowtail Papilio demoleus sthenelus, Dainty Swallowtail Papilio anactus, White Migrant Catopsilia pyranthe crokera, Yellow Migrant Catopsilia g. gorgophone, Caper White Belenois java teutonia, Scarlet Jezebel Delias a. argenthona, Lesser Wanderer Danaus petilia, Monarch Danaus plexippus, Common Crow Euploea corinna, Glasswing Acraea a. andromacha, Meadow Argus Junonia v. villida, Tailed Emperor Charaxes s. sempronius, Grey Ringlet Hypocysta pseudirius, Common Grass-blue Zizina otis labradus Beetles: a small green beetle Diphucephala sp. (very common esp. on Soap Tree Alphitonia excelsa) Ants: Giant Bull Ant Myrmecia gulosa, Green-head Ant Rhytidoponera metallica, Daemel’s Spiny Ant Polyrhachis daemeli, Southern Meat Ant Iridomyrmex purpureus

Monday, October 28, 2024

November Outing Details: Glen Lomond Park, McStay Street entrance, Sunday 03 November 2024

McStay St entrance, Glen Lomond Park

Time:
 8.30 am

Where:  at the McStay St entrance

Directions: Follow Rowbotham Street to the far end and turn left onto Zupps Road. Turn left again into Dippel Street and park at the McStay Street entrance. 

Description: This is one of Toowoomba’s Escarpment Parks and the least visited of all the parks that make up the escarpment park precinct. The track travels through a grassy paddock that becomes narrower approaching the ridge. It undulates until it reaches a cleared picnic area that offers magnificent views of the range including Table Top Mountain (Meewah).

Activities: We have a permit from the Toowoomba Regional Council to take 3-4 vehicles (preferably 4WD) through the locked gate to the end of the Hell Hole track. It is suggested we put our morning tea, lunch and chairs in the vehicles while most of us walk the Spur track (340 metres) and those less able to take a vehicle ride to the picnic area. (It is not suggested we take the full 2.75 kilometre walk to the Hell Hole Falls.)

Level of Fitness: All levels - see Activities above.

Facilities: benches, picnic tables and shelters but no rubbish bins, so come prepared to carry rubbish back with you. Also no toilets, probably the nearest are at Duggan Park.

What to Bring: suitable clothing and footwear for walking in the bush, sunscreen, insect repellant, water, morning tea and lunch, chair, and the usual naturalist stuff of your choice; binoculars, camera, field guides, notebook, etc.

Sunday, October 13, 2024

October Camp Details: Stanthorpe, Friday, 18th - Monday 21st October 2024

Non-members, please contact our Secretary for full details (toowoombafieldnaturalists@gmail.com). 
Members, please see your October newsletter for details.
Nats at Girraween in 2009
Stanthorpe Campout Friday 18th – Monday 21st October 2024. Suggested accommodation (but not essential) Top of the Town Tourist Park where camping, powered sites and cabins are available.
Places we're visiting: Basket Swamp, Boonoo Boonoo, Storm King Dam, Girraween and Old Wallangarra Road. 
Hopefully the wildflowers will still be spectacular.

September Outing Report - Nangwee, 08 September 2024

Adapted from the Toowoomba Field Naturalist Club newsletter, Issue 800, October 2024 
North Branch of the Condamine
Photo: R. Ashdown
Members travelled west out of the basalt hill country onto the black soil plains (originally treeless grassland) of the Condamine River Alluvial Plains. At the property near Nangwee we were welcomed by our hosts and their family; their daughter and son being the fourth generation on the land.
This sustainably managed cereal and cotton property has double frontage along the North Branch of the Condamine River providing habitat for native fauna, including the Endangered
Condamine Earless Dragon
Photo: L. Balmain

Condamine Earless Dragon Tympanocryptis Condaminensis and the Vulnerable Brigalow Woodland Snail Adclarkia cameroni
Quality crops of chickpeas, sorghum, wheat, barley and more, assisted by irrigation from water harvesting and alluvial water from the Condamine Catchment Alluvium, are produced on the property.
From along the treed banks of the North Branch of the Condamine and around the homestead and dams, the following list of fauna has been compiled from members' sightings. 

Mammals: Eastern Grey Kangaroo, European Brown Hare, Red Fox* Birds: Hardhead, Pacific Black Duck, Grey Teal, Australian Wood Duck, Australasian Grebe, Rock Dove, Spotted Dove, Crested Pigeon, Dusky Moorhen, Pied Stilt, Masked Lapwing, Silver Gull, Australian Tern, Australian Pelican*, White-necked Heron*, Eastern Great Egret, Australian White Ibis, Little Pied Cormorant, Little Black Cormorant, Pied Cormorant, Australasian Darter, Black-shouldered Kite*, Wedge-tailed Eagle*, Spotted Harrier*, Grey Goshawk*, Whistling Kite, Black Kite, Eastern Barn Owl, Sacred Kingfisher, Laughing Kookaburra, Nankeen Kestrel, Cockatiel, Galah, Little Corella, Sulphur-crested Cockatoo, Red-winged Parrot, Pale-headed Rosella, Scaly-breasted Lorikeet, Superb Fairy-wren, Striped Honeyeater, Noisy Friarbird, Little Friarbird, Brown Honeyeater, Blue-faced Honeyeater, White-plumed Honeyeater, Noisy Miner, Spotted Pardalote, Striated Pardalote, White-throated Gerygone, Western Gerygone, Black-faced Cuckoo-shrike, Rufous Whistler, Golden Whistler, Australian Magpie, Pied Butcherbird, Willie Wagtail, Grey Fantail, Torresian Crow, Australian Raven, Restless Flycatcher, Magpie-lark, Apostlebird, Mistletoebird, Double-barred Finch, Australasian Pipit, Golden-headed Cisticola, Welcome Swallow, Common Myna. Reptiles: Red-bellied Black Snake* Amphibians: Emerald Spotted Treefrog Molluscs: Brigalow Woodland Snail*, Invasive Field Slug Deroceras invadens, Freshwater Mussel Alathyria jacksoni Crustaceans: Common Yabbie Cherax destructor Butterflies: Orchard Swallowtail, Chequered Swallowtail, Green Grass-dart, Small Grass-yellow, Cabbage White, Caper White, Black Jezebel, Lesser Wanderer, Monarch, Common Crow, Glasswing, Meadow Argus, Brown Ringlet, Common Grass-blue. Dragonflies and damselflies: Aurora Bluetail, Australian Emperor, Tau Emerald, Wandering Percher, Scarlet Percher, Blue Skimmer.                            

 * Denotes species seen enroute to and from Toowoomba/Nangwee.

Nats enjoying a break on the September outing
Photo: D. Johnston

Monday, September 2, 2024