Its true and how we come to have Rainbow Lorikeets ..First year we saw a pair getting about , second year 5 or 6 this year easily a dozen and all nesting in a huge palm tree centre of town .
Another noisy bird so Ill bet someone has released the original pair and the rest are their offspring .
We have a Corella and although not overly noisy she does have her moments where you wish a gust of wing would catch her and take her to the next town.
Long billed correlas
- Nrg800
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I saw a heap of Rainbow Lorikeets at Dubbo this afternoon, and I thought, what?!jusdeb wrote:Its true and how we come to have Rainbow Lorikeets
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- mattymeischke
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For what it's worth, I met a bloke in Wagga last week who reckoned that the large free-flight aviary at the botanical gardens in Wagga was damaged in a storm some years ago, and that some Rainbow Lorikeets escaped at that time.
Since then, he has had them in his garden in increasing numbers, having never before seen them in Wagga.
Since then, he has had them in his garden in increasing numbers, having never before seen them in Wagga.
Avid amateur aviculturalist; I keep mostly australian and foreign finches.
The art is long, the life so short; the critical moment is fleeting and experience can be misleading, crisis is difficult....... (Hippocrates)
The art is long, the life so short; the critical moment is fleeting and experience can be misleading, crisis is difficult....... (Hippocrates)
- wagga
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- Location: PORT MACQUARIE NSW
I used to live near the Wagga botanical gardens, free flight aviary location, and yes now we have a feral population of rainbows, the odd scalie, doves, unfortunately most of the birds died or disappeared after the storm.
Life in Port Macquarie is the ultimate Aussie sea change lifestyle.
- mattymeischke
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I had understood that the Rainbows stuck to the coast because they relied on year-round nectar supplies.
Perhaps the well-tended gardens of Wagga and Dubbo are able to fill that need sufficiently to maintain a feral population? Or perhaps they are being fed by locals.
Perhaps the well-tended gardens of Wagga and Dubbo are able to fill that need sufficiently to maintain a feral population? Or perhaps they are being fed by locals.
Avid amateur aviculturalist; I keep mostly australian and foreign finches.
The art is long, the life so short; the critical moment is fleeting and experience can be misleading, crisis is difficult....... (Hippocrates)
The art is long, the life so short; the critical moment is fleeting and experience can be misleading, crisis is difficult....... (Hippocrates)
- TheFinchMan101
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My school which is only a few kms away from the wagga botanical gardens always gets rainbows, you always see them up on the oval digging away at the lush green grass, once scared they head off to a little forest reserve just to the left of the school. I'm not sure if there wild or ferel populations because ive always seen them there. We also get hundreds of grass parrots up here as well. I think also a reason they come here is because the wagga golf course is right behind the school as well as the lake, I'm not sure...... But as I can see they are thriving.
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In all the thousands of rainbows I have seen, in Brisbane, Ipswich and for the last 12 years on the Gold Coast I have never seen them on grass. They are always in trees and occasionally will land on a fence or other structure,bowl, etc to feed.TheFinchMan101 wrote:My school which is only a few kms away from the wagga botanical gardens always gets rainbows, you always see them up on the oval digging away at the lush green grass, once scared they head off to a little forest reserve just to the left of the school.
MadOzzie