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Tamarillo Tree 101
How thoughtless that I have never introduced you to the tamarillo tree!!
If you sit under it, you face the fig tree, and are easily ‘embedded.’ Now, some ‘observation projects’ are serious – we traipse across the river, to freeze or get nibbled by flies (depending on the season). However, it is legitimate to sneak out under the tamarillo tree – especially in the mornings and evenings – and just sit and watch.
What you see is not nearly so bland as it may appear (and the grass and the clothesline and the fence are a positive not a negative aspect: ‘embedded’!!) There is a short track by the fig tree, and it leads to an island of scrub just behind the house-clearing. A track runs at ninety degrees to that short track. One end of it runs down to the two meadows, and the other end runs down to the corridor, which is – as the crow flies – only about three hundred yards away. This island of scrub has figured in the past: it is the ‘staging-ground’ from which really shy – wild – birds entice my birds off on adventures, so this is also a good place to listen to vocalisations.
So, the combination of tracks and nearby meadows – and the fact that the gums here on the north side are the ‘jumping off’ point for forays against the fig tree and into the house-clearing – means that any BYC visitor who sits for an hour under it, at least on autumn mornings, can be fairly certain of observing unalarmed wild birds at close range through the binoculars. Several tame birds will cross the fence at right, right in front of you, in order to tax the plums that fall under the tree.
While you are waiting – especially morning and evening – you’ll see myriads of wild birds at the bird bath: silvereyes, magpies, rosellas, ‘big silvereyes,’ new Holland honeyeaters, parrots, kookaburras, kurrawongs, splendid fairy wrens, robins, willy wagtails; sometimes in flocks of fifteen and twenty. (Rosella in the photo.) Swallows and hawks and wedgies and muirs corellas and black cockatoos and owls are all to be seen, at times, in flight overhead.
S.E.
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