DISTRIBUTION: Throughout Australia,
including Tasmania. Also Indonesia and New Guinea; accidental to New
Zealand.
NOTES: Also called Blue Jay, Summerbird (Tasmania), Cherry Hawk
and Shufflewing. In pairs or small flocks, according to season; inhabits open
forest-lands. It is mainly a summer migrant to Tasmania, and partly nomadic
elsewhere. The flight is undulating and the wings are always shuffled and
adjusted when the bird alights. The chief call is a pleasant, trilling note with
a distinctive quality, often uttered while in flight. Food: Insects and their
larvae, procured amongst the leaves of trees; berries are also eaten. (I am
seeing this bird on power lines after flight from two mulberry bushes in front
of the house.)
NEST: A small neat saucer, made of dry twigs and bark bound with
cobweb; built in a horizontal fork of a tree (often a eucalypt) usually from ten
to twenty metres above the ground
EGGS: Three; olive-green to pale
olive-brown, spotted umber, chestnut-brown and dull grey. Breeding season:
August to December
from
What Bird is That? Neville W. Cayley. 1931 revised
by Terence Lyndsey. 1984 p.152 ...Angus and Robertson, Sydney
Australia
These birds are not regular vistors to my parts of the Central
Coast and have proved to be elusive and difficult to photograph. WoIt is a work
in progress and I apologise for any inconvenience