General description of location
Port Germein is a small country town just north of Port Pirie which is a major regional centre about 2½ hours from Adelaide
Lies near the top of Spencer Gulf and is in the shadow of the Southern Flinders Ranges.
Town has a pub with excellent food, a general store and campground
Small local population of around 250
A long jetty, once used to load grain clippers, it extends from the shore to over a mile out to sea and most of the beach is exposed at low tide
Good fishing, crabbing and general coastal wildlife walks
Notes
Season:
Late summer
Weather:
Mild morning temperature around 18 ºC at 0900.
Forecast temperature 35°C later in the day
No wind and clear skies
While walking from the house where I am staying to the jetty I spot some blue bees, an Australian native species, feeding on a coastal bushes with small blue flowers
They tend to feed on blue and white blossoms
Note to self
Identify some of the coastal vegetation before next PT Germein post
I stroll along the jetty and notice a variety of small wading birds feeding on the sand/mud flats, some are searching out small pools of residual water
A young couple near the end of the jetty are crabbing and they have caught half a dozen Blue Swimmer Crabs which are common at this time of year
A group of Pied Cormorants and Common Terns are perching on some battered poles which remind us that the jetty was once longer
A family have used a tractor to tow out a small boat and launch it as the tide comes in
The view from the end of the jetty of the foreshore and Ranges is spectacular.
I return to the shore and walk along coastal path that weaves between low bushes and stretches of beach
There are honeyeaters and finches in the bushes and a Ring Necked Parrot preens itself on a branch
Near a rocky outcrop close to a garden I come across a Bearded Dragon sunning itself
There are also quite a few White Plumed Honey Eaters feeding on blossoms in Eucalypt trees that grow in gardens near the coastal walk
After sipping nectar some are hawking for insects.
A ten minute walk from the end of town, the coastal scrub and samphire give way to stands of mangrove and a whole new coastal ecology emerges
A White Faced Herons stalk small fish and crustacean in the shallow channels and a White Browed babbler fluffs up its feathers in one of the mangrove trees
These mangroves are part of a south Australian system that marks the southernmost extent of mangrove communities in the world
Small fish can be seen schooling in some of the deeper channels
This is a nursery area for many commercial species.
I head back to town for a schnitzel and a beer at the local pub and the promise of a drive to Telowie or Port Germein Gorge in the afternoon to look for rock wallabies and eagles.
Cheers
Baz
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