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The Big Twitch

Page 33

by Sean Dooley


  On Boxing Day I stooged around the compound at Kingfisher Park, recuperating and just soaking up the delights of the local bird population. That night I joined Andrew and Carol and a local ranger in a spotlighting expedition following up a report of a Greater Glider, a rare mammal this far north. We didn’t find the glider but we did flush what turned out to be a Masked Owl from the side of the road. I’d looked for this bird the length and breadth of the country, from the very first night of the year, and here it was unexpectedly on one of the last nights.

  The next day I did the dude thing and headed out to the Great Barrier Reef. While the tourists all hit the shallows on Michelmas Cay I spent my time on land marvelling at the cacophony and chaos of the seabird colony. No new bird for the year but plenty to enjoy amongst the screaming terns and noddies. The second half of the boat trip was to an outer reef. I had come out to this reef ten years earlier and was simply blown away by the profusion of colourful life amongst the coral. It was still an incredible experience but there had been coral bleaching as a result of the abnormally high temperatures of the ocean (global warming, anyone?), so the snorkelling was a little disappointing.

  All good things must pass and if I was to be in Melbourne to start my new non-twitching related job (although in the new series, imaginatively titled Comedy Inc, I do manage to slip in my first ever birdwatching sketch involving two bird nerds appearing on the Jerry Springer show), I had to head off. So with something approaching grief I reluctantly left Kingfisher Park and began the long drive home. Two days later I arrived in Brisbane. Collecting Andrew Stafford we headed out to Sherwood Park for one last try for those Little Bitterns. I’d looked for these bastards there before. I’d looked for them in Victoria, New South Wales and Western Australia, and had dipped every single bloody time. As soon as we left the carpark we were greeted by a couple of Bush-hens who put on quite a raucous display, giving much better views than I’d had at Julatten. A good sign, perhaps?

  You couldn’t find a less amenable place than Sherwood for a reclusive species like Little Bittern. The ornamental ponds didn’t have a huge amount of suitable habitat, just some rank vegetation fringing the islands in the centre. All around was the noise and hustle of humans in leisure mode: people walking dogs, kids playing rugby, a local whose unfenced property lay adjacent to the park starting up his mower and cutting his grass. Incredibly, amidst all this hubbub, a male Little Bittern stood resolutely still, waiting to snatch an unsuspecting water creature as it swam by. Incredibly, after 364 days of birding and 702 prior species, seeing this at number 703 still delivered an enormous adrenaline rush.

  Little Bittern was to be my last bird of the Big Twitch. The next day, New Year’s Eve, I dropped in on Paul Wallbridge and he calculated that the only possible bird left for me was Streaked Shearwater, which can sometimes be seen from the land, particularly near river mouths. So my last birding moments were spent surrounded by tourists perched above Point Danger on the Queensland–New South Wales border, gazing desperately out to sea through my telescope. No joy.

  I made my way down to Byron Bay in New South Wales to watch the year slip away. Jezz and Karen had hired a holiday house there so it was good to spend New Year’s Eve with people I care about. And I was relieved that, although I almost cost them their jobs, they welcomed me with open arms, a smile, and a cold beer. We hit the town and I realised with a sinking heart that I was to spend another New Year’s Eve in the presence of hippies. Actually, that’s a bit unfair as most of the genuine hippies had gone bush. The teeming throng of people milling around us included not just the hippies whose combi vans had broken down, but also masses of drunks, Hare Krishnas, holidaymakers, gangs of teenage boys hoping for a bit of action and a similar number of teenage girls chugging down enough alcoholic soft drinks to ensure at least a few of the boys might succeed in their aim. The countdown clock ticked through to midnight and as the fireworks exploded, people erupted in a frenzy of cheering and drunken pashing.

  The Big Twitch was over. I was back in the real world. Looking around this world that I had turned my back on for a year, seeing the manic desperation of those around me to have a good time no matter what, suddenly my quest didn’t seem so absurd. In fact it seemed to make more sense than any of the human behaviour I saw around me.

  EPILOGUE 13

  December, 2004, St Kilda, Victoria:

  still no girlfriends

  There are a million ways to occupy your time on this planet. They’re all pretty much absurd if you analyse them too closely. I chose twitching, one of the more outwardly absurd of them all I suppose but really no more ridiculous than anything else, yet that year of absurdity has had a profound effect on my life since.

  Not that being the new Australian birdwatching record holder means terribly much to anyone outside the twitching scene. The opportunity to bring up that fact doesn’t pop up in general conversation too often. It took me twelve months of hard slog, almost a hundred and fifty thousand kilometres of travel: eighty thousand by road, sixty thousand by air and two thousand by boat. It cost around forty thousand dollars not including the price of the four wheel drive, video and other equipment, all for seven hundred and three species and a swag of amazing memories. But do you think the woman in the check-out queue cares? You think the guy next to me at the footy gives a toss? And what about the girl with the Rainbow Pitta eyes sitting opposite me at the restaurant table? Does she think, having heard my tale, that I am too much of a weird-arse freak to bother dating a second time?

  Not that I can’t see how blowing my inheritance to spend a year birdwatching wouldn’t come across as a little bit weird. But I know if I had never gone through with it I would not be sitting at this restaurant. The real legacy of the Big Twitch is that for the first time in my life I feel totally comfortable in my own skin. Not because I spent a year birdwatching but because I was able to achieve something I always wanted to do and that has left me deeply satisfied. In the past I doubt I would have been able to ask this woman out for fear of rejection, whereas now I realise that even if the date goes horribly wrong it ultimately doesn’t matter because I know I can be by myself, can rely on myself. If I am thrown out of the pack I know I can not only survive, but thrive.

  I am happy within myself which is after all, only what my parents ever wanted for me. I reckon they would have thought I was a bloody idiot if I’d told them about my plans but having used their legacy to achieve my goal has somehow lessened the grief I felt at losing them. Before that year I was still raw about their deaths, after it I felt at peace. Sure, it might have been a pretty stupid goal but it was my goal. It was what I really wanted and was able to pound down the demons of self-doubt and loneliness to get out there and actually do it…

  This all fell into place for me a few months after I had finished the Big Twitch. I was at a movie premiere. Being a hack comedy writer I hadn’t been invited on my own merits but was there as somebody’s handbag. It was quite a big occasion, several international names were in attendance along with Melbourne’s best and brightest. At one stage I accidentally got caught on the red carpet behind Heath Ledger.

  Some screaming fans had yelled for me to turn around so I could sign their autograph books. When I faced the crowd, two fourteen-year-old girls stop screaming and look me up and down disdainfully.

  ‘Who’s that?’ sniffed one.

  ‘Don’t worry, he’s nobody,’ the other snorted derisively.

  It was at that moment that I realised I couldn’t disagree with them more whole heartedly. I was who I wanted to be.

  My name is Sean and I’m a twitcher. And I don’t care who knows it.

  Well, that’s not quite true. The Big Twitch has made me realise how comfortable I am in my own company but that doesn’t mean I want to embrace being alone. I look up at those amazing blue eyes, awaiting a response to my tale. I hold no expectations that she will think my twitching habit is cool but I am desperately hoping that she won’t think I am a total freak. She pauses, looks
down at the menu and says, ‘I suppose we should order before the kitchen closes. They do a great calamari salad here.’

  Damn, I thought I was doing so well.

  Still, at least she hasn’t called a cab just yet.

  Official Big Twitch List

  1 Sooty Owl, Tyto tenebricosa, Jan 1, Gembrook, VIC

  2 Laughing Kookaburra, Dacelo novaeguinaeae, Jan 1, Gembrook, VIC

  3 Common Blackbird, Turdus merula, Jan 1, Carlton, VIC

  4 Common Starling, Sturnus vulgaris, Jan 1, Carlton, VIC

  5 Spotted Turtle-dove, Streptopelia chinensis, Jan 1, Carlton, VIC

  6 Little Raven, Corvus mellori, Jan 1, Carlton, VIC

  7 Magpie-lark, Grallina cyanoleuca, Jan 1, Carlton, VIC

  8 Common Myna, Acridotheres tristis, Jan 1, Carlton, VIC

  9 House Sparrow, Passer domesticus, Jan 1, Carlton, VIC

  10 White-plumed Honeyeater, Lichenostomus penicillatus, Jan 1, Carlton, VIC

  11 Rainbow Lorikeet, Trichoglossus haematodus, Jan 1, Carlton, VIC

  12 Tree Sparrow, Passer montanus, Jan 1, Carlton, VIC

  13 Feral Pigeon (Rock Dove), Colombia livia, Jan 1, Carlton, VIC

  14 European Goldfinch, Carduelis carduelis, Jan 1, Melb.Cemetery, VIC

  15 Red Wattlebird, Anthochaera carunculata, Jan 1, Melb.Cemetery, VIC

  16 Silvereye, Zosterops lateralis, Jan 1, Melbourne Cemetery, VIC

  17 Superb Fairy-wren, Malurus cyaneus, Jan 1, Melbourne Cemetery, VIC

  18 Australian Magpie, Gymnorhina tibicen, Jan 1, Melbourne Cemetery, VIC

  19 Red-rumped Parrot, Psephotus haematonotus, Jan 1, Melbourne Cemetery, VIC

  20 European Greenfinch, Carduelis chloris, Jan 1, Melbourne Cemetery, VIC

  21 Yellow-rumped Thornbill, Acanthiza chrysorrhoa, Jan 1, Melbourne Cemetery, VIC

  22 Silver Gull, Larus novaehollandiae, Jan 1, Carlton, VIC

  23 Welcome Swallow, Hirundo neoxena, Jan 1, Carlton, VIC

  24 Willie Wagtail, Rhipidura leucophrys, Jan 1, Carlton, VIC

  25 Musk Lorikeet, Glossopsitta concinna, Jan 1, Carlton, VIC

  26 Song Thrush, Turdus philomelos, Jan 2, Northcote, VIC

  27 Little Wattlebird, Anthochaera chrysoptera, Jan 2, Royal Botanic Gardens Melbourne, VIC

  28 Dusky Moorhen, Gallinula tenebrosa, Jan 2, Royal Botanic Gardens Melbourne, VIC

  29 Pacific Black Duck, Anas surperciliosa, Jan 2, Royal Botanic Gardens Melbourne, VIC

  30 Black Swan, Cygnus atratus, Jan 2, Royal Botanic Gardens Melbourne, VIC

  31 Eurasian Coot, Fulicia atra, Jan 2, Royal Botanic Gardens Melbourne, VIC

  32 Hardhead, Aythya australis, Jan 2, Royal Botanic Gardens Melbourne, VIC

  33 Galah, Cacatua roseicapilla, Jan 2, Royal Botanic Gardens Melbourne, VIC

  34 Bell Miner, Manorina melanophrys, Jan 2, Royal Botanic Gardens Melbourne, VIC

  35 White-browed Scrubwren, Sericornis frontalis, Jan 2, Royal Botanic Gardens Melbourne, VIC

  36 Australian Wood Duck, Chenonetta jubata, Jan 2, Royal Botanic Gardens Melbourne, VIC

  37 Nankeen Night Heron, Nycticorax caledonicus, Jan 2, Royal Botanic Gardens Melbourne, VIC

  38 Great Cormorant, Phalacrocorax carbo, Jan 2, Royal Botanic Gardens Melbourne, VIC

  39 Little Black Cormorant, Phalacrocorax sulcirostris, Jan 2, Royal Botanic Gardens Melbourne, VIC

  40 Chestnut Teal, Anas castanea, Jan 2, Royal Botanic Gardens Melbourne, VIC

  41 Clamorous Reed-Warbler, Acrocephalus stentoreus, Jan 2, Royal Botanic Gardens Melbourne, VIC

  42 Little Pied Cormorant, Phalacrocorax melanoleucos, Jan 2, Royal Botanic Gardens Melbourne, VIC

  43 Australian White Ibis, Threskiornis molucca, Jan 3, Laverton, VIC

  44 Masked Lapwing, Vanellus miles, Jan 3, Werribee, VIC

  45 White-necked Heron, Ardea pacifica, Jan 3, Geelong, VIC

  46 White-faced Heron, Ardea novaehollandiae, Jan 3, Geelong, VIC

  47 Sulphur-crested Cockatoo, Cacatua galerita, Jan 3, Geelong, VIC

  48 Black-shouldered Kite, Elanus axillaris, Jan 3, Geelong, VIC

  49 Great Egret, Ardea alba, Jan 3, Winchelsea, VIC

  50 Straw-necked Ibis, Threskiornis spinicollis, Jan 3, Winchelsea, VIC

  51 Swamp Harrier, Circus approximans, Jan 3, Winchelsea, VIC

  52 Yellow-billed Spoonbill, Platalea flavipes, Jan 3, Winchelsea, VIC

  53 Royal Spoonbill, Platalea regia, Jan 3, Winchelsea, VIC

  54 Purple Swamphen, Porphyrio porphryio, Jan 3, Winchelsea, VIC

  55 Wedge-tailed Eagle, Aquila audax, Jan 3, Stoneyford, VIC

  56 Grey Butcherbird, Cracticus torquatis, Jan 3, Cobden, VIC

  57 Yellow-faced Honeyeater, Lichenostomus frenatus, Jan 3, Ralph Illidge Res, VIC

  58 Grey Fantail, Rhipidura fuliginosa, Jan 3, Ralph Illidge Res, VIC

  59 Eastern Yellow Robin, Eopsaltria australis, Jan 3, Ralph Illidge Res, VIC

  60 Crimson Rosella, Platycercus elegans, Jan 3, Ralph Illidge Res, VIC

  61 White-eared Honeyeater, Lichenostomus leucotis, Jan 3, Ralph Illidge Res, VIC

  62 New Holland Honeyeater, Phylidonryis novaehollandiae, Jan 3, Ralph Illidge Res, VIC

  63 Grey Shrike-thrush, Colluricincla harmonica, Jan 3, Ralph Illidge Res, VIC

  64 White-naped Honeyeater, Melithreptus lunatus, Jan 3, Ralph Illidge Res, VIC

  65 Brown Falcon, Falco berigora, Jan 3, Port Fairy, VIC

  66 Whiskered Tern, Chlidonias hybrida, Jan 3, Port Fairy, VIC

  67 Golden-headed Cisticola, Cisticola exilis, Jan 3, Port Fairy, VIC

  68 Skylark, Alauda arvensis, Jan 3, Port Fairy, VIC

  69 White-fronted Chat, Epthianura albifrons, Jan 3, Port Fairy, VIC

  70 Long-billed Corella, Cacatua tenuirostris, Jan 3, Camperdown, VIC

  71 Hoary-headed Grebe, Poliocephalus poliocephalus, Jan 3, Stoneyford, VIC

  72 Whistling Kite, Milvus sphenurus, Jan 3, Stoneyford, VIC

  73 Australian Shelduck, Tadorna tadornoides, Jan 3, Colac, VIC

  74 Dusky Woodswallow, Artamus cyanopterus, Jan 4, Seaford Swamp, VIC

  75 Brown Thornbill, Acanthiza pusilla, Jan 4, Seaford Swamp, VIC

  76 Australian Pelican, Pelacanus conspicillatus, Jan 4, Seaford Swamp, VIC

  77 Latham’s Snipe, Gallinago hardwickii, Jan 4, Seaford Swamp, VIC

  78 Little Grassbird, Megalurus timoriensis, Jan 4, Seaford Swamp, VIC

  79 Black-winged Stilt, Himantopus himantopus, Jan 4, Seaford Swamp, VIC

  80 Sharp-tailed Sandpiper, Calidris acuminata, Jan 4, Seaford Swamp, VIC

  81 Greenshank, Tringa nebularia, Jan 4, Seaford Swamp, VIC

  82 Grey Teal, Anas gibberifrons, Jan 4, Seaford Swamp, VIC

  83 Curlew Sandpiper, Calidris ferruginea, Jan 4, Seaford Swamp, VIC

  84 Red-necked Stint, Calidris ruficollis, Jan 4, Seaford Swamp, VIC

  85 Caspian Tern, Sterna caspia, Jan 4, Seaford Swamp, VIC

  86 Red-capped Plover, Charadrius ruficapliius, Jan 4, Seaford Swamp, VIC

  87 Red-necked Avocet, Recurvirostra novaehollandiae, Jan 4, Seaford Swamp, VIC

  88 Australian Hobby, Falco longipennis, Jan 4, Seaford Swamp, VIC

  89 Black-faced Cuckoo-shrike, Coracina novaehollandiae, Jan 4, Seaford Swamp, VIC

  90 Eastern Rosella, Platycercus eximmius, Jan 4, Seaford Swamp, VIC

  91 Noisy Miner, Manorina melanocephala, Jan 4, Seaford Swamp, VIC

  92 Black-fronted Dotterel, Elseyornis melanops, Jan 4, Seaford Swamp, VIC

  93 Black Kite, Milvus migrans, Jan 5, Werribee, VIC

  94 Fairy Martin, Hirundo ariel, Jan 5, Werribee, VIC

  95 Pied Oystercatcher, Haematopus longirostris, Jan 5, Werribee, VIC

  96 Black-tailed Native-hen, Gallinula ventralis, Jan 5, Werribee, VIC

  97 Musk Duck, Biziura lobata, Jan 5, Werribee, VIC

  98 Nankeen Kestrel, Falco cenchroides, Jan 5, Werribee, VIC

  99 Banded Stilt, Cladorhynchus leucocephalus, Jan 5,
Werribee, VIC

  100 Pink-eared Duck, Malocorhynchus membranaceus, Jan 5, Werribee, VIC

  101 Australasian Shoveler, Anas rhynchotis, Jan 5, Werribee, VIC

  102 Singing Bushlark, Miafra javanica, Jan 5, Werribee, VIC

  103 Pied Cormorant, Phalacrocorax varius, Jan 5, Werribee, VIC

  104 Horsefield’s Bronze-Cuckoo, Chrysococcyx basalis, Jan 5, Werribee, VIC

  105 Blue-billed Duck, Oxyura australis, Jan 5, Werribee, VIC

  106 Freckled Duck, Stictonetta naevosa, Jan 5, Werribee, VIC

  107 Great Crested Grebe, Podiceps cristatus, Jan 5, Werribee, VIC

  108 Marsh Sandpiper, Tringa stagnatilis, Jan 5, Werribee, VIC

  109 Red-kneed Dotterel, Erythrogonys cinctus, Jan 5, Werribee, VIC

  110 Wood Sandpiper, Tringa glareola, Jan 5, Werribee, VIC

  111 Darter, Anhinga melanogaster, Jan 6, Kew, VIC

  112 Magpie Goose, Anseranas semipalmata, Jan 6, Edithvale Swamp, VIC

  113 Buff-banded Rail, Gallirallus philipensis, Jan 6, Edithvale Swamp, VIC

  114 Intermediate Egret, Ardea intermedia, Jan 6, Edithvale Swamp, VIC

  115 Crested Pigeon, Ocyphaps lophotes, Jan 6, Edithvale Swamp, VIC

  116 Spotless Crake, Porzana tabuensis, Jan 6, Edithvale Swamp, VIC

  117 Australian Spotted Crake, Porzana fluminea, Jan 6, Edithvale Swamp, VIC

  118 Spotted Pardalote, Pardalotus punctatus, Jan 9, Banyule Flats, VIC

  119 Little Lorikeet, Glossopsitta pusilla, Jan 9, Banyule Flats, VIC

  120 Australasian Grebe, Tachybaptus novaehollandiae, Jan 9, Banyule Flats, VIC

  121 Mistletoebird, Dicaeum hirundinaceum, Jan 9, Banyule Flats, VIC

  122 Red-browed Finch, Neochmia temporalis, Jan 9, Banyule Flats, VIC

  123 Pied Currawong, Strepera graculina, Jan 10, Kew, VIC

 

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