Alison & Boyd

153 Musicians 2

boyd 2014-01-01

Cockatoos & Parrots, Cormorants & Pelicans, Cuckoo-Shrikes & Orioles, Cuckoos

No.50 Miranda Hill

Red-tailed Black-Cockatoo

Harsh metallic rolling far carrying cree cree. Simpson and Day

No.51 Chris Williams

Yellow-tailed Black Cockatoo

Wailing kee-aaah; staccato growl. Simpson and Day.

No.52 Stephen Bradbury

Galah

Voice rather harsh, metallic and abrupt, yet not unpleasant: ‘chirrink-chirrink, chirrink-chirrink’ and variations ‘chzink-chzink’, ‘czink-czink-czink-czink’; in alarm, harsh, scolding, rasping screeches. Morecombe

No.53 James Eccles

Sulphur-crested Cockatoo

Loud, raucous, unpleasant screeches, usually an intermix of harsh and sharp sounds, varying from deep, grinding and guttural to powerful, piercing screeches of ear-splitting intensity: ‘airrrik, aarrrk, ahrk, aieirrk, aieirieik!’. Morcombe

No.54 Damien Ricketson

Cockatiel

High far carrying rolling cweeree. Simpson and Day

No.55 Patrick Hansen

Rainbow Lorikeet

In flight gives frequent, quite pleasant, softly rasping or vibrating musical screeches; softer mellow chattering and subdued screeches while feeding; quiet twittering while resting. Morecombe

No.56 David Rothenberg

Red-winged Parrot

Brassy crillik-crillik in flight. Simpson and Day

No.57 Guy Freer

Pale-headed Rosella

Call in flight is an abrupt ‘czik-czik-, czik-czik-’. From trees gives high but soft, thin and slightly tremulous ‘fee-e-fee-e-fe-e’ or ‘fwe-we-we-wee’ Simpson and Day

No.58 Aviva Endean

Budgerigar

Continuous chirrup; zitting alarm call. Simpson and Day

No.11 Adrian McNeil

Australasian Darter

Voice is a harsh, ‘kar, kar,ka, ka-ka-kakaka loud and slow, gradually more rapid, then fading. At nest, loud, brassy cacklings and clicking sounds.

No.12 Hughes & Datson

Little Pied Cormorant

keh-keh-keh’ and a harsh, deep ‘uk-uk-urk’. A sharp croak is used as an alarm call.

No.13 Vanessa Tomlinson

Pied Cormorant

Usually silent, but various cacklings, loud ticking, deep gutteral grunting in breeding colonies.

No.14 Eo Greensticks

Little Black Cormorant

Usually silent but some ticking and croaking among birds in fishing flocks; gutteral croaks and tickings at nest.

No.15 Bassling

Australian Pelican

Voice deep with resonant croaks and gutteral grunting.

No.122 Weizen Ho

Black-faced Cuckoo-shrike

Unusual musical rolling purring or churring note. Pizzey

No.123 Gary Warner

White-bellied (Little) Cuckoo-shrike

Typical call is a peevish ‘kissik, kissik’ or quizeek’ Pizzey

No.124 Emma Hunt

Ground Cuckoo-shrike

Far-carrying ‘pee-ew, pee-ew’; also chill-chill....kee-lick, kee-lick’. Pizzey

No.125 Michael Goldberg

White-winged Triller

Slightly descending ‘chiff-chiff-chiff-joey-joey-joey’ or ‘deet-deet-deet-dip-dip-dip-dip-drrr’ ending in a canary-like trill. Pizzey.

No.126 Tanya Sparke

Olive-backed Oriole

A frequently repeated sequence is a rollicking ‘orry-orry-orriole’, quite clearly pronouncing itself to be an ‘oriole’. The song is a prolonged version of the call, wandering through similar sequences of notes, often with mimicry of other birds, ‘quiee-kwee-kworri-kworriole’; also varied querulous squawking and rasping sounds.

No.127 Richard Kean

Figbird

Short sharp yelps ‘pow! pow! pow!. Many soft musical calls. Simpson and Day

No.59 Paul Jarman

Pallid Cuckoo

Male utters the well-known ‘harbinger-of-spring’ call: upward scale of about eight whistled notes, the second note slightly below the first, the rising in a quarter-tone or cromatic scale; uttered persistently day and night. Pizzey

No.60 Bernard Houston

Brush Cuckoo

A shrill far-carrying deliberate, usually descending phrase of about 7 or 8 notes, ‘fear-fear-fear...’ repeated shrill rising phrases ‘Where’s the tea Pete’ becoming demented.

No.61 Paul Burton

Black-eared Cuckoo

A quite descending mournful ‘peeeeeeer’, singly or repeated, livelier ‘pee-o-wit-pee-o-weer’ repeated. Pizzey

No.62 Shaun Barlow

Horsefield’s Bronze-cuckoo

Single long descending ‘tseeeeuw’, ‘prrelll’ or ‘pir-r-r’, repeated persistently. Pizzey

No.63 Jon Rose

Shining Bronze-cuckoo

Somewhat like a person whistling a dog; clear high pitched deliberate ‘feee, feee, feee, feee’, each note rising at the end: often ends in descending ‘pee-eerr’. Stacatto notes. Pizzey

No.64 Ron Nagorcka

Channel-billed Cuckoo

Voice awful.‘awrrk, aworrk, oirrk, oik-oik-oik’

No.65 Roger Dean

Pheasant Coucal

Deep hollow ‘coop-coop-coop-coop-coop-coop’, slow at first, accelerating and descending like liquid glugging from a bottle; also harsh, though not loud, scolding notes. Pizzey.