These two are roosting by day quite close to home but I have only had a short time to photograph them so far - very rewarding nevertheless, but I will have to get more while the opportunity is there. They seem quite undisturbed by my presence at the end of a 300mm lens.
Good find ... Nice shots, love the 2nd with these big staring eyes!
Great shots.He certainly knows your there, looking straight in the eye.
Beautiful photos
M-L
Love it!
I had one of these guys in the yard on Sunday night, sitting comfortably only a couple of metres away.
Cheers
Tim
Brisbane
Great photos,
What a coincidence i had 3 tawny frogmouths roosting in a casuarina near my house at warriewood and I took some photos of them with a 300mm lens
TAWNY FROGMOUTHS; hello I’m Fredrick we {Delia & I} are lucky to have TFs roosting at our place 12klms from Brisbane CBD in the northern suburbs. Sometimes one, most times two and in one period, three we supposed it to be a family.
These interesting birds sit all day on the casement windows of our house. We had our grandson Anthony visiting in late 2011 and after searching the Internet wildlife sites I started logging the visits. There was one wildlife site, I found back then, not BIBY, which suggested keeping data on the birds as little is known of their habits. So now I have two years of roosting numbers and interestingly which casement sills the TFs chose that particular morning to be on fro the day. For instance visits are, days with a solo bird, other days two, sometimes both sitting on the one sill, or one on each sill same window set, sometimes roosting well apart as today, Saturday 26th, 2 1W, 21N. This is one TF on a western facing window pane of bedroom #2, another on bedroom 2 also but on a northern facing window pane.
I’m hoping that forum members will be interested in my collected data and looking forward to any feedback and comments. We also have Butcher birds visiting daily, please see “Butcher bird visits” this forum.
It must only be coincidence, but i rescued one Tawny Frogmouth some years back. It was sitting in the centre of a city bound lane of a fairly major traffic route. Wrapping it up in a blanket, I took it home and next morning went to a local AVARIAN vet the next day I received a telephone call to return to collect the bird or they could pass it on. I said I would collect the TF and then that night would release it into the same area, as I’d found it… No experience on this, but it seemed like the correct thing to do.
I’m curious to know where the TFs go at night just after mid dark and if that hunting and feeding place is where they hang out all night. It is just as day breaks that they return to our window sills. Sometimes we hear a bit of chatter as they settle onto the top of a window or onto separate panes.
Another thing that I would like to know is WHY, one day the TFs are snuggled up close on the one pane, or separated by 200mms and on another day are on separate panes or even separate windows, one window facing north the other facing west.
Today, I heard a prolonged noise from the bird on #2n, {a window facing North} Previously, I have thought of it as a drumming sound, a vibration coming from the bird’s chest. I would like to hear other members’ views and interpretations of the sound. I have just been fitted with moulded, in ear aids and still learning and waiting for the retuning of my ear drums, but not sure then what the sounds will be.
The sound is a bit like a long woooooo, which is building up, to some greater sound, - if that makes sense to anyone.
Yes, a bit owlish, but not the “ooo”, “ooo”, “ooo” or “who”, “who”, “who”, of an owl, but a deep sound, from the chest or gut, a vibration, a “woo”, rather than a “who” Any comments?
Delia & Fredrick
Wednesday, July 30th, 2014 1338hrs.
What an interesting story. I'm most interested in what ever you can observe. I used to have one male that hunted from my roof every night for more than a year. He got so used to us, or ignored us(?), that he wasn't bothered by us coming and going. You see, he mostly sat close to were the car was parked and the rubbish bin was.He was just part of where we live. One morning he sat on our door mat, just looking at us ,as if he wanted help. His tummy looked swollen and he didn't move. He was there to ask us to help. (Sounds strange? But that's what it looked like). At the time we had no idea if the bird was male or female, so I took it to our local vet. At first he thought it might be a female and what they call "egg bound" when the egg gets stuck in the wrong place and can't come out. But the vet discovered it was a boy with a massive tumor in his guts. No question , he was humanely put to sleep.
I still miss him, because we often watched him hunting from our gutter at night.
I haven't seen any since that close to my house, but I hear his friends call during the night.
Good luck with your observations, I would love to hear more.
Thanks for sharing with us.
M-L
Fascinating to learn of your experiences with the Tawny Frogmouth.A lot of interesting behaviour you have observed.
You might wish to create your own topic with the same information in the Surveys and Interesting Sightings forum here on Birds in Backyards. You have added your post in the photos forum, and I think you will get further comments if you redo it in the Surveys and Interesting Sightings forum.
http://www.birdsinbackyards.net/forum/Surveys-and-interesting-sightings