Most nature docs will just say "this species is native to australia" and completely neglect that australia is a massive place where native animals can become pests elsewhere. I admire how thoroughly you explain everything in these videos while keeping it entertaining! Keep up the good work
@the-Backyard-Naturalist16 күн бұрын
Yeah they don't seem to realise that Australia is a continent with many diverse ecosystems and climates, separated by deserts, mountains and seas.
@ianking-jv4hg16 күн бұрын
Also there are subspecies of rainbows in Indonesia, New Guinea, the Solomons, Vanuatu and the New Hebrides.
@kredonystus776816 күн бұрын
Same goes with laughing kookaburras. Most WA locals don't realise they are introduced and outcompete the native kingfishers.
@user-gz9sy8rh6f12 күн бұрын
We are the “ pests” ! We intrude their world.
@ianking-jv4hg12 күн бұрын
@@user-gz9sy8rh6f tell that to my mad rainbow lorikeet "ARky" (almost road kill) Trichoglossus haematodus. A well travelled bird that couldn't fly. Walk, car, boat, bus, train but no plane ! Mad, he liked good loud music and getting almost as drunk as me.
@aarondavies562117 күн бұрын
the amount of excitement when I see a new backyard naturalist viddy drops >>>
@grandmothergoose16 күн бұрын
Same. I check every Sunday night and if there's no new video from this channel, I find myself rewatching the previous ones again.
@r4gn4r0k6913 күн бұрын
whats bro pointing to 😭😭😭 stop like begging kid
@depreshawn7 күн бұрын
@@r4gn4r0k69 me when i skip maths class:
@jackaufenhand571016 күн бұрын
My aunt has a pet lorikeet. His name is Paulie and he likes to imitate people. He imitates calling the dog, phone calls, and when my aunt smokes a bong, he not only imitates the sound of the bong, but also specifically imitates her cough afterward. He also imitates her laugh even when it devolves into coughing.
@robwilcox728415 күн бұрын
That comment is pure gold 👏🏻😂 I would love to meet your Aunt and her pet Lorikeet 🫶🏼
@jzawh13 күн бұрын
I love this 😅
@AV-sl9wg13 күн бұрын
Our son and his fiance also have two of them which the male will initiate everything he hears including the radio conversation of the host, the dishwasher, the microwave and of course the laughter.
@Mugruncher11 күн бұрын
Your aunt sounds cool as hell 😎
@georgew.96634 күн бұрын
Your aunt sounds fukin mad
@jess53nz10 күн бұрын
Omg dude, cackled at "sorry bro" 🇳🇿❤️🇦🇺
@richardwinzor296116 күн бұрын
Threw in every nickname but the flying fruit tingle.
@humanrich15 күн бұрын
“Confetti conquistadors have colonised this continent.” Fantastic writing.
@Ihadthismate14 күн бұрын
“These sky high tie dyes” is perfect
@humanrich14 күн бұрын
@@Ihadthismate it’s giving Lano and Woodley.
@FleshWizard6942017 күн бұрын
The bird:🥰 The bird's call: 👹 Love the Lorikeets
@tazgecko16 күн бұрын
Love these birds. Sitting back with a hot cupper watching these guys stuff around. Weekends are made for it.
@danielkelly875616 күн бұрын
That's the sulfer cockatoos, the rainbow lorikeets have sweet calls
@Zoosmell41316 күн бұрын
And magpie's are the opposite.
@bygoditsfullofstars11 күн бұрын
Aussie birds in a nutshell
@shakeelali2016 күн бұрын
The Rainbow Lorikeet. Arguably the cutest and most annoying alarm clock in existence. The soundtrack to most Aussie's mornings across the country.
@trinefanmel15 күн бұрын
Can relate. Sometimes they all decide to roost in the eucalypts on the next hill over from me. On the evenings they roost there, you can hear them as late into the night as 12 or 1 am. I walked under there one afternoon just as they were roosting for the night and it was DEAFENIING! I loved it!
@peg797312 күн бұрын
My favourite bird in the whole wide world.
@adventure_onthedaily985114 күн бұрын
‘Their customer-facing parts’ had me cackling
@metaidentity17 күн бұрын
Ah, the rainbow mafia. Another great video :)
@zeropoint54616 күн бұрын
That is exactly what my wife and I call them.
@justaperson838117 күн бұрын
The picture of the lorikeet with a gun got me
@uzetaab16 күн бұрын
It bears repeating that if you want to feed native birds you do it by planting native trees.
@pipers_river16 күн бұрын
The second Tassie hybrid Lori is giving Rainbow Paddlepop
@jonh956115 күн бұрын
Rarer than an Eshay with a valid train ticket ........gold!
@Divadosaurus13 күн бұрын
It made me lol out loud
@NeedsMoreBirds16 күн бұрын
They're beautiful little bastards, that's for sure.
@martinkuliza9 күн бұрын
they are, and cheeky little bastards at that
@peg797312 күн бұрын
Also, with the seed feeding, it eventually wears down the little bristles on their tongue which is essential for their necatarious lifestyle. So just thought I'd pop that in. I had a rescue lorrie. She had a bed tent on top of her cage. When she was ready for bed she would wait at the entrance for me to come and make sure she was tucked in. Then she would lay down and go to sleep all night until her outside gang came early again the next morning. I miss you Groggy xx
@ashleysmith310611 күн бұрын
Just come in from watering my garden under a cacophony of NOISE from the blooming Lillli Pilli next door, full of Rainbows !
@benstevens322018 күн бұрын
Darcy mate! You made it happen!! Thank you so much. Love seeing these shrieking rainbows in my back yard.
@the-Backyard-Naturalist17 күн бұрын
Made this one just for you mate
@grahamogorman783110 күн бұрын
I love Rainbow Lorikeats. Had 200 walking n climbing on me daily n eating out of hand. Have seen them SMASH Kurrawongs
@superbettynow12 күн бұрын
'Sky high tie-dies' - beautiful!
@grantb816816 күн бұрын
My Buddy and his untrustworthy Missus decided to amp up his relationship with me this year. He said, "If I land on you're head, I want sunflower seeds. If I land on your shoulder, I want sunflower seeds and if I land on your screen door and whistle for thirty minutes, I want sunflower seeds." Apparently sunflower seeds are his favourite because if I feed him other seeds, he gives me the bird, (pun intended) and disappears for several days. Picky bloody eater. Awesome job, Darcy ... and the Oscar goes to, The Backyard Naturalist. Yay.
@the-Backyard-Naturalist16 күн бұрын
That's a little bit wholesome! Always a pleasure to read your comments Grant
@grantb816816 күн бұрын
@@the-Backyard-Naturalist Nice to know I have a purpose in life, Darcy; I'll try to up my game for the next Blockbuster Episode of The Backyard Naturalist. I knew I should have poignantly referred to "More Rainbows than a Pride Parade on Acid." Of course, my uping my game means the expectation is on you to exceed all previous endeavours. Where else is my inspiration going to come from? See you in the next one.
@grantodaniel705316 күн бұрын
Hi Grant, you want to be careful with the sunflower seeds - they're chock full of fats. We "spoiled" our pet galah with them because they were his favourite too, and we nearly lost him. He developed a large lipoma in his lower abdomen which had to be surgically removed, and the vet, after querying his diet, told us about the high fat content of the sunflower seeds. So we keep them to a minimum in his diet now. His fave treat now is brocholli?! 😅😅 All the best from SA. 👍
@emceeboogieboots160816 күн бұрын
Broccoli hey? Will be planting some soon and will see if our noisy arsehat likes it
@seaztheday441816 күн бұрын
Please consider feeding them fruit and flower blossoms instead. Being fed too many seeds can destroy the delicate 'feather' on their tongues that they use to eat their natural diet; fruits and flower nectar. If their tongues are damaged, they find it harder to survive in the wild.
@jimmywrangles11 күн бұрын
As a wildlife carer we used to call these birds "Flying Boltcutters", they'll bite you and then make eye contact and bite harder...scary hard.
@hadgeron955614 күн бұрын
I’ve seen rainbow lorikeets fight everything from king parrots to even sulphur crested cockatoos, they have short bird syndrome and will fight things many times their size, or screech loudly at them I guess
@RobertBrusOfficial11 күн бұрын
That was awesome!
@64Pete15 күн бұрын
My lori is my best mate. Except when he isn't. He's an excellent mimic, I'm training him to whistle the Italian national anthem. He makes me laugh so much he has copied my laugh perfectly. He also swears like a fkn sailor.
@AV-sl9wg13 күн бұрын
The lori our son and daughter in law has likes to copy the tune of the Mexican hat dance.
@Jagermonsta17 күн бұрын
6:25 I'm in QLD, about 3 weeks ago I had to take a Lori to the vet, it wasn't able to fly and wasn't able to walk properly. Still put up a good fight when I put it in the box though, hope the little guy is alright. Doesn't sound good though :(
@moodycxnt16 күн бұрын
I notice the red, blue and yellow all camouflage well too. When they're feeding on nectar the red and yellow often blends in with flowers and shrubs, and blue with the sky!
@Lara-rj5fi16 күн бұрын
Woohoo, another video from our Aussie Attenborough. ❤
@sicpuppy943516 күн бұрын
My hand raised female rainbow Lorikeet lived for 30 years and had a vocabulary of around 6 / 8 words
@ConstantlyDamaged18 күн бұрын
Ah. Glad they pissed off and didn't hang around my little sparrow feeder, then. I think they dropped in only to cause some biffo. They'd brawl with sparrows and spotted doves like crazy, hardly even go near the feeder, then leave again. Thanks again for another great video!
@the-Backyard-Naturalist17 күн бұрын
They absolutely live for a punch on
@user-gz9sy8rh6f12 күн бұрын
They are vicious! All birds fl😮y swiftly out of their way!
@NeuroKytsh17 күн бұрын
every summer all i ever hear is lorikeets in my back garden, its great. i have wattlebirds and ravens living in my garden too and theyre all always bickering, endless entertainment
@kezia80275 күн бұрын
Holy god, we had a crab apple tree at my home growing up and the lorries LOVED them. When you've got maybe 30 lorrikeets outside your window every single day you start to love their 'song' a little less every day. A nearby shop had a couple of larger trees outside that would get HUNDREDS and you could hear them from miles away screeching and squawking lol still a really beautiful bird though
@colinross625913 күн бұрын
Had a backyard with a gum and bottlebrush tree. The normally bully noisy minors went quiet and moved away when the Loris come to town. Thanks for another insight to a great Aussie bird.
@pulsecodemodulated16 күн бұрын
I never wanted a bird, but then my housemate rescued a baby disco chicken while working on a building site in Melbourne. Pure adorable chaos.
@Centurion1317 күн бұрын
Fuck yeah Lorikeets.
@MagpieManor15 күн бұрын
Really love these cheeky, noisy Birds! They always come in pairs or massive flocks and they have their own personalities. Oh and the colours and chirps are the best! Thanks for the video! 👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏
@the-Backyard-Naturalist15 күн бұрын
Thank you! Love your birdy vids :)
@MagpieManor15 күн бұрын
@@the-Backyard-Naturalist 👍👍👍
@tjf514812 күн бұрын
How do you know you're watching an Australian news report? Rainbow Lorikeets screeching in the background. Never noticed? Now you will!!!
@qbmac230617 күн бұрын
Your alliteration never ceases to amaze me.
@_vibin_high14 күн бұрын
We call them The Street Tuffs - they bully literally EVERY bird in our back yard.
@footyanimator16 күн бұрын
I can honestly say that these videos are the best thing I’ve found on KZfaq
@harryp699714 күн бұрын
Umbrella tree nectar gets them drunk. I know it's probably not good for them, but drunken lorikeet brawls are hilarious.
@scruncheduppaper482815 күн бұрын
oh god, rainbow lorikeets are sooo loud. in certain urban places there will be only a couple of gum trees where they gather and even standing NEAR THEM is enough to make your ears hurt. you can't even see any of them because they camoflage so well, even though judging by the sound of it there must be hundreds! love these birds though, they're very sociable and don't seem to be as scared of people as some others are.
@theSam9113 күн бұрын
They are the star attraction since I put a bird bath in the front yard. Their behaviour and interactions with each other is so hilariously funny to watch.
@kchsc15 күн бұрын
the OneyPlays reference was a nice touch
@splanting16 күн бұрын
that's so true they do brighten up my morning on the way to work, I always see a flock hiding in a neighbour's camellia hedge
@ectoplasmicz16 күн бұрын
Yesssss rainbows lets go! My best friend is a rescue rainbow, evil loud abusive angel and i love her.
@jasone83014 күн бұрын
How could you omit that just like they typical Aussie, they get drunk off fermented fruit! What a missed opportunity! 😅🍹
@MozillaVulpix9 күн бұрын
I love your sense of humour in these videos.
@BlessedBeTheFroot10 күн бұрын
No ending of you sitting on a log, chucking a spready? That was the best bit! 😉
@Peleski13 күн бұрын
Rainbow Lorikeets are a recurring symbol used in the Sydney G&L Mardi Gras (go figure). Yes they may be pesky, but they really brighten up your day when you see one. I can attest that I never saw any in Sydney until the 80s. There was a big fire in the National Park and the birds flew into the city. I'm glad we planted so many nectar natives (less happy about the Noisy Miners though, and no more sparrows).
@mollyeverglade365516 күн бұрын
I absolutely love our continent's gaggle of feathered chaos demons and the Rainbow Lorikeet is no exception. I actually like waking up to their cacophony in the morning.
@TheAbeKane17 күн бұрын
Another fun vid bro. There's a local Lori flock of 50 odd, that fly over my house every afternoon. When the setting sun hits them their colours come alive and it's so beautiful to watch...bit bloody noisy though lol
@rubenmontero481312 күн бұрын
“As rare an eschay valid train ticket “ 😂
@RAAFtiger12 күн бұрын
Love the use of Zachs scream hahaha
@haroldharold283613 күн бұрын
Wow. That “soory bru “ was spot on 😑
@NicolasEricson-hf3rf7 күн бұрын
Love your commentary bro. Super descriptive ,👍
@DangerAngelous14 күн бұрын
I meet one up close in a tree the other week, very kindly let me take really close up pictures of him!
@romeoC996816 күн бұрын
Some of these birds called our fig tree home for the past 10 years, and last year when it didn't produce any fruit they discovered our plum tree....if they ate the hole fruit we wouldn't mind but one or two bites was enough from each....hundreds of fruit wasted.....and the nets never stopped them. We had to get rid of the fig tree a few weeks ago, they've moved to the tree opposite our house but they scream every morning, almost sounding angry they we had to get rid of the tree.
@Peleski13 күн бұрын
ugh, what pesky birds.... I can't imagine what fruit growers have to do
@laurapianezzola393413 күн бұрын
One bedroom unit with water boarding facilities. Sign me up.
@Enthusiastic-Trainspotter-BNE13 күн бұрын
Being as a Queenslander myself, I genuinely was unaware that these lorikeets in our state are getting left paralysed.💔😢😭
@shannonpincombe848512 күн бұрын
Their plummage looks amazing under black light. Most birda and flowers ahve a difderent colour when on Ultra Violet and Infra Red. Insects, in particular, see the world so differently from us. I wish had tetrachromatic vision. That would be wild!! Damn fine video pal.
@devilisdutch17 күн бұрын
The puns and analogies are excellent and genuinely informative. I love these, please keep it up.
@JohnGardnerAlhadis16 күн бұрын
"Botched Warhammer paint job" was absolutely on-point. 👌
@connordarvall848216 күн бұрын
I love how we just accept that we live with a bunch of screeching Windows 7 logos in our trees.
@the-Backyard-Naturalist16 күн бұрын
Best bird, best operating system, it checks out
@seshjuan420699 күн бұрын
as someone who lives on a pretty big lot of land with native trees in it, i can confirm that Lorikeets scare the shit out of the magpies in my yard just by walking up to them.
@clayalbatross49615 күн бұрын
When it comes to their status in New Zealand, Rainbow Lorikeets did indeed establish a population here, namely in Auckland if I remember correctly. The population was unfortunately exterminated though, which is due to legit worry that they could have become yet another invasive species to add to the list, and that they were seen as likely vectors of certain parrot specific diseases that could threaten our native parrots. As lovely as lorikeets are, it is perhaps for the best that they never establish here (though it would be awesome if we had a native lorikeet!). Eastern Rosellas are a widespread introduced species in NZ's North Island though, and also have a separate population around the city of Dunedin in the South Island. The classic Sulphur-Crested Cockatoo also has some feral populations here and there in NZ, plus Galahs have feral populations on some of the islands near-ish to Auckland.
@mnj64015 күн бұрын
We didn't have them till about 30 years ago in SA. Now we also have fruit bats.
@_Jade_Stone12 күн бұрын
🦜 thank you 🙏🏼
@katem396116 күн бұрын
Hi from Perth Western Australia, aka Alaska 🤣 Absolutely love your vids ❤ I have a lot of birds visiting my yard but only see the lorikeets flying overhead and in the park behind my house in very small numbers. Though we do have a real issue with corellas in our area. Boy, are these guys super noisy and can be destructive! They fly over every morning and evening in huge numbers as they tend to congregate at the nearby Jandakot airport, causing havoc I would imagine due to the huge flock sizes and small aircraft. I love the 28, Ringneck, but have not seen any near my suburb of Perth. Great information presented with very clever wit. Keep up the fabulous content. Thank you 💗
@lyallfurphy16 күн бұрын
They’re an introduced invasive species in Perth and responsible for displacing Twenty Eights :’(
@Zar224414 күн бұрын
I love seeing the Lorikeets in the yard, no bird should be a pet, unless it has been unable to fly. Sad to see people sellng them on Gumtree.
@garrywatters114015 күн бұрын
In the NT there is a variety called the red collared lorikeet.
@jonnowood838211 күн бұрын
I subbed purely because you said they were rarer than eshay with a valid train ticket. Gold!
@leekarssen14 күн бұрын
I had a pet one as a child in the 90’s. I swear he thought he was human 😂
@Survivor-gu8gc14 күн бұрын
I paused the video while on a walk and was confused when the bird noises continued
@PistachioDean16 күн бұрын
I was interested in the evolution of their colouring, and apparently it's a form of "mosaic evolution." Their colouring evolved at different points and independently of each other. So the green is for camouflage (I think this is their OG colour), and the other colours help identify their species amongst other lorikeets. Some of their colours are invisible to humans, and all their markings make up 1/3 of colours birds can see.
@DuringDark16 күн бұрын
6:30 for anyone concerned the paralysis syndrome isn't terminal, I teared up on the first watch seeing some snuggled up "smiley" little guys who may never fly or see their partner again
@No_Vanilla6 күн бұрын
I love watching Australian yt documentary coz I actually understand the slang used to a personal level.
@NewFalconerRecords16 күн бұрын
Beautiful mongrels.
@alanmoffat468016 күн бұрын
In the 1950s and 60's our Black Bean tree in a Brisbane suburb would be visited by "Greenies" during flowering season. They were not Scaly Breasted Lories . There was then a change to Rainbows and the Greenies "disappeared."
@stephengodfrey564414 күн бұрын
Hello i live in Broome North Western Australia and as summer approaches every year and the fruit of the mango trees ripen you find lorikeets chattering in the mango trees.
@kredonystus776816 күн бұрын
You should do one on our most dangerous spiders because most people don't realise it's more likely for you to die from being struck by lightning this year than to die from a spider bite.
@Kayenne5415 күн бұрын
That's weird. Just saw a vid on YT today, and the guy was struck by lightning through his kitchen window. Don't touch the taps, the fridge, the shower taps, the metal on the windows. There's nowhere to hide from lightning anymore....
@quinnwatson50098 күн бұрын
God I love this channel
@madmadimadison754212 күн бұрын
Best one yet! And informative! I'm defs not gonna build that bird feeder now 😱
@SOUTHAUSSIEGUY16 күн бұрын
Love these guys on my block in the Adelaide Hills _ P.S, that beer with the pie floater should be a South Aussie Coopers Ale!
@davidgodzik709314 күн бұрын
Rarer than an eshay with a valid train ticket 😂😂
@ulrikezachmann759614 күн бұрын
Thanks for that. Things I didn’t know. I have some that come to my window because I feed some back yard buddies. I mixture of all types. These Loris are very bossy and let me know when the feed has run out with loud screeches. I make a special mixture with fruit, vegetables and assorted grains as well as rice. Mostly the Currawongs, Australian Minor and Pigeons eat it as well as Crows and other species. They all seem to be healthy. Though the Pigeons who would eat anything tend to be the ones that become unwell with disease. The beak and feather disease is apparent in Sydney Cockatoos and some Corella’s. Very sad that. So feeding platforms are a no. A table could be a platform so hygiene is very important just like your own kitchen.
@jsmit1101js14 күн бұрын
Love the video! Autistic person whose special interest is birds here, be careful using the term lory and lorikeet interchangeably, because they dare different species/subspecies of bird. Their common family is Loriini but lories and lorikeets are different subspecies of honeyeaters in the Loriini taxonomy/family. In behaviour they are basically the same, loud, trouble making jokesters with a pension for property damage. I happen to have a black capped lory myself (Lorius.L.lory if anyone is interested) however here are some fun facts of how they are different to one another as they are different types of bird! Lorikeets are generally a lot smaller around 75-150ish grams depending on locality and species, they also have long thin tails and shorter more rounded beaks. While lories clock in at around 200-280ish grams (which is a lot bigger when it comes to avian species as they are very light to begin with) similar in size to a small galah. They are also a lot rounder bodied, have very shot and stubby squared off tail and more elongated beaks. As far as I am aware, however I could be wrong, lories are only found in New Guinea/Indonesia and the adjacent islands. Whereas lorikeets are found in many different places, including Australia, partially because they are much better suited for longer flights, where lories tend to rely a lot of jumping branch to branch if that is a option. As a bird nerd just thought I would through some commonly overlooked information everyone’s way! If you want any other facts about these guys or really any other species of parrot/bird I will be happy to chat, I have raised, rehabilitated or obsessed over many species of bird and would be happy to reply to anyones questions to the best of my ability! Last note, don’t get them as pets, they are even worse to keep then parrots and parrots make bad enough pets (coming from someone who owns both) you need to dedicate your life to them and they will still bite you, cost you thousands and brake your ears and your house. If you want a parrot, you most likely don’t, you actually want a pigeon. They are domesticated and are a much better option so I encourage you to look into them first!
@JAB632216 күн бұрын
HONEY WAKE UP NEW BACKYARD NATURALIST VIDEO HAS DROPPED 👀👀👀
@emceeboogieboots160816 күн бұрын
Have I read this one before 🤔 Maybe I am thinking of Primitive Technology... Regardless I love it😂
@johnnyojohnny12 күн бұрын
I've experienced a few wild lorikeets with the paralysis syndrome, usually on the first day of encountering them they are unable to properly fly anymore, can tell something is wrong when approaching the lorikeet because it can only either hop away on the ground like a kangaroo or it starts to try and climb up a nearby tree. On first day they still have some strength to fight back but by 2nd day their health has deteriorated rapidly not able to move much and eyes keep closing like they are sleeping. The ones I've met with the condition don't live much more then a few days to a week at most but they would of likely caught this sickness a long while before, and since the lorikeets try not to show their illness it's hard to spot the sick ones until it's too late. I notice some wild lorikeets that close their eyes in same way, it's not a sleeping type, cause when they close their eyes they still twitch and not relaxed. The Lorikeet group will isolate and avoid this sick one, maybe this is early symptoms to the sickness
@possummagic357116 күн бұрын
That Patrick Bateman appearance got me! 😂
@user-js8gp1vi5g16 күн бұрын
I was thrilled to see a pair of gang-gangs in my neighbour's back yard this morning. I have just discovered your channel- thank you. Sue
@CasualFehPlayer-rf6sl16 күн бұрын
I used to love these birds as a kid what with the colours and all but now there just meh I work outside a lot so I tend to see and hear them everywhere. One thing I didn’t realise until I was older was that they weren’t the sweet little birbs I thought they were but actually nectar induced psychos that bully and bite and fight anyone and anything including themselves. Great vid as always.👍🏼
@juanitaschlink202816 күн бұрын
Man, love your vids. I live in Sydney and am familiar with most of the animals you spotlight, but always manage to learn something from you. Keep it up you little legend. Xx
@moebius2k10314 күн бұрын
They also love to flock in a single tree at shopping centre car parks and rain down shit on any car under that tree. All while their deafening shreeks pierce everyones ear holes like tiny daggers.
@avocadoarms35811 күн бұрын
If your actually from australia, you know that you see more of the introduced Indian minor bird than any other bird
@Uncoolmitch16 күн бұрын
This is great, these are great, you’re great, bird great.
@barokemoman330716 күн бұрын
Lorikeets like to eat from our guava tree at the back. They do leave mess lol
@einfelder826215 күн бұрын
There is a massive flowering gum tree in the street near my bedroom window. Usually every May the 5am 120db screeching of a thousand lorikeets wakes me too early. So far this year have only seen the advance scouting pairs searching for which tree is their next food supply. The tree is not flowering yet. Melbourne East.
@the-Backyard-Naturalist15 күн бұрын
Theory confirmed
@viviennerodgers535115 күн бұрын
I have a 5 acre paddock & the Rainie Lollies there eat the mulbery tree grapes before I get a chance to pick them. 😅