Tag Archives: Aldgate

Aldgate to Stirling…a short walk

24 Sep

Dear Reader:

It is still early Spring and the sun is out and I have often spotted a small copper headed skinks basking in the sun at this time of year. There are several logs on the northern facing aspect of the path and with a little patience and perseverance I manage to find one of the little lizards. Their correct name is the Common Garden Skink or Sun Skink.

Common Garden Skink

Following up on my previous post, which covered the area around the RSL Hall, on the edge of Aldgate, I am now walking the short path to Stirling. The trail follows the road and creek on one side and is heavily wooded on the other. There are numerous plants both native and introduced along the pathway including: Holly, tall pines, grevilleas, a few eucalyptus and acacia species as well as ferns and bracken.

Holly in the Hills

Grevillea species

After a fifteen-minute stroll along the pathway I reach the outskirts of Stirling. The town has an English country village feel about it with some lovely old homes and many small shops and businesses. Whenever I visit Stirling there always seems to be a welcoming committee of Little Ravens (often mistaken for Crows) in the area. Today is no exception as a group of the shiny black corvids trumpet their characteristic calls from a nearby garden.

Little Raven Stirling

I do not venture far into Stirling as it will be the subject of a later blog. I head back down the path to Aldgate. The dense vegetation, now to my right, is full of movement and the sounds of small birds in the undergrowth; probably wrens and finches. I scan the other side of the road and spot a Koala high in the branches. I take a couple of shots to demonstrate how difficult locating wildlife can be and how training your eyes to notice subtle changes and movement takes continual practice.

Koala at 100 metres

As I approach the outskirts of Aldgate I notice a track on the other side of the road near the township sign. Crossing over, I follow it a short way as it cuts along the hillside and into the scrub. This area is dominated by tall eucalypts and is a more typical hills bushland setting than the pathway.

The track near the entrance to Aldgate

Adelaide Rosella

Koala Aldgate

My detour is well worth the effort. Within a few minutes I have managed to photograph an Adelaide Rosella perched on an old, gnarled branch and a Koala at far closer range than before.

FRED……..Barista at work

FRED….Cosy place to dine

With the walk concluded I drive into Aldgate for lunch at Fred, a wonderful local eatery and another compelling reason to visit Aldgate. Over the years, I have had some wonderful meals in this iconic hills café and I’m sure today will be no exception. The only problem is one of choice with so many interesting dishes to choose from. After some serious deliberating, I end my day in Aldgate with a Croque Monsieur and a Chai Latte, selected from the ‘All Day Breakfast Menu’.    

Cheers Baz

Additional notes

This is an easy walk and drive which is quite suitable for families and seniors with public toilets, parking and other facilities nearby. It is dog friendly.

Please pass on this blog title and or contact information (URL) to any person or organisation with an interest in taking walks and enjoying wildlife in SA.

Click on these links and see more South Australian stories and pictures in my Weekend Notes articles as well as locating similar blogs on Feedspot’s top 20 Australian wildlife blogs

https://www.weekendnotes.com/adelaide/writer/452/

https://blog.feedspot.com/australian_wildlife_blogs/

Aldgate to Stirling 1……..around the RSL and church

26 Aug

Dear Reader:

There is a small stream running under the roadway which is overshadowed by tall Eucalyptus trees. I can hear the raucous calls of Galahs, Lorikeets and Sulphur-crested Cockatoos coming from high in the canopy. I swing the Nikon telephoto in a broad arc and eventually locate a lone Galah (Rose-breasted Cockatoo) gripping the trunk of a Stringy Bark Gum. On a grassy area near the playground, which is adjacent to the stream, a male and female Maned Duck are sitting close to each other some distance from the water.

Galah (Rose-breasted Cockatoo)

Male and female Maned Ducks or Wood Ducks

In another tree, I spot an Adelaide Rosella perched amongst the branches and leaves and nearby a second bird  is feeding on the buds of a non-native tree.  In the last few minutes I have identified four species of parrots , two by sight and two by sound. A nice start to my walk between the Aldgate RSL club and the outskirts of Stirling in the Adelaide Hills.

Adelaide Rosella

Adelaide Rosella feeding

Before I take my intended walk back to Stirling along the roadside pathway, I decide to explore the immediate area as I have been surprised by the diversity of birdlife here. A short stone stairway leads up to the Soldiers Memorial and a clearing with some garden seats. I sit for a while contemplating lives lost and the sacrifices made by families to ensure our way of life.

Soldiers Memorial

Golden Whistler

While I am sitting near the Memorial a Golden Whistler lands in the bushes close to me. This truly beautiful bird is not common and I feel privileged to watch it hopping between branches.

Superb Fairy Wren (Male)

Anglican Church of the Ascension

On the other side of the main road there an Anglican Church. It is shaded by trees and appears to have a range of flowers and flowering trees and shrubs in the grounds; always a good sign when one is searching for wildlife. I have heard the twittering call of wrens while walking up to the church and, as if on cue, I notice a male and female Superb Fairy Wren fossicking in the gravel beneath the Church Noticeboard.

Pair of Laughing Kookaburras

The church’s pretty wrens and flowers seem to have rounded off the first part of my walk around the Aldgate RSL but I am left with one more divine offering. A pair of Kookaburras, that I have not noticed, start to call from a branch in the largest eucalypt overlooking the church. There has been so many species in this small area that I have decided to cover the actual walk back to Stirling in my next post.

Cheers

Baz

Additional notes

This is an easy walk and drive which is quite suitable for families and seniors with public toilets, parking and other facilities nearby. It is dog friendly.

Please pass on this blog title and or contact information (URL) to any person or organisation with an interest in taking walks and enjoying wildlife in SA.

Click on these links and see more South Australian stories and pictures in my Weekend Notes articles as well as locating similar blogs on Feedspot’s top 20 Australian wildlife blogs

https://www.weekendnotes.com/adelaide/writer/452/

https://blog.feedspot.com/australian_wildlife_blogs/