Search Results for 'crested pigeon'

Crested Pigeon in a bird bath

Crested Pigeon, Murray Bridge

Crested Pigeon, Murray Bridge

I’m not sure if I’ve shown these photos before. Never mind if I have. I was sorting through a few photos taken a few months ago and came across these of a Crested Pigeon IN our bird bath. It wasn’t content to sit on the edge of the bowl – it had to actually get into it and sit in the water.

When I checked a few minutes later I discovered that there wasn’t much water there anyway, so the bird was probably giving me a hint: “Fill ‘er up, mate!”

So I did.

Crested Pigeon, Murray Bridge

Crested Pigeon, Murray Bridge

Crested Pigeon resting

Crested Pigeon, Murray Bridge, South Australia

Crested Pigeon, Murray Bridge, South Australia

A few days ago I took a series of photos of one of theĀ  Crested Pigeons resident in our garden. This bird was sitting in one of our bird baths. Normally they just sit on the edge and take a short drink, but this one must have felt the need to sit in the water. I don’t think there was much water in it, but it still looked rather comical.

Subsequent photos show the bird in various poses before it decided to fly off.

Crested Pigeon, Murray Bridge, South Australia

Crested Pigeon, Murray Bridge, South Australia

Crested Pigeon, Murray Bridge, South Australia

Crested Pigeon, Murray Bridge, South Australia

Crested Pigeon, Murray Bridge, South Australia

Crested Pigeon, Murray Bridge, South Australia

Crested Pigeon, Murray Bridge, South Australia

Crested Pigeon, Murray Bridge, South Australia

Crested Pigeons, Botanic Park, Adelaide

Crested Pigeon, Botanic Park, Adelaide

Crested Pigeon, Botanic Park, Adelaide

Crested Pigeons are one of my favourite birds. We have a number resident in our garden and they have even nested several times within a few metres of our house. When the breeding season has been successful I have seen up to 35 Crested Pigeons sitting on the power lines running past our property. Elsewhere in Murray Bridge I have even seen about 60 in a loose flock sitting on power lines along the road.

Crested Pigeon, Botanic Park, Adelaide

Crested Pigeon, Botanic Park, Adelaide

Crested Pigeons are widespread throughout Australia except for the driest parts of the inland, southern Victoria and they are absent from Tasmania. They are also largely absent from the northern most parts of Australia. This distribution is changing and some Crested Pigeons can be found in the Melbourne region, for example, something that was rare as recent as a decade ago.

Crested Pigeon, Botanic Park, Adelaide

Crested Pigeon, Botanic Park, Adelaide

Crested Pigeons are ground feeders and can often be seen feeding in parks in loose flocks numbering in the dozens. This is the case in Botanic Park between the Adelaide Botanic Gardens and the Adelaide Zoo where the photos on this post were taken.

Crested Pigeon, Botanic Park, Adelaide

Crested Pigeon, Botanic Park, Adelaide

The birds in these photos were busy displaying to one another, more interested in breeding than in my wife and I having afternoon tea in beautiful park on a lovely spring afternoon.

Further reading:

 Botanic Park, Adelaide

Botanic Park, Adelaide

Crested Pigeon nesting

Crested Pigeon

Crested Pigeon

About three weeks ago I was walking the estate. (We live on a five acre block on the edge of town.)

As I passed a row of Hakea francisiana bushes I checked thoroughly for any bird nests. These bushes, which are about four metres high, often host pigeon or honeyeater families.

Sure enough, a Crested Pigeon was sitting on a nest. I quietly crept away, knowing how easily pigeons can be disturbed from their nests. Sadly, when I checked back last week, the nest was abandoned. Even sadder was the half grown chick hanging from a fork in a branch. It was dead.

Hakea francisiana

Hakea francisiana

Something must have disturbed this young chick which then tried to escape, only to hang itself. The culprit could have been an Australian Magpie (they are feeding young at present), a Grey Currawong ( who will take young from a nest to feed its own), a Brown Falcon (which has been harassing the local birds recently) or even a Little Raven.

On another sad note, today when working in the scrub I found the wing of an adult Crested Pigeon. There was no evidence of who had taken this poor creature.

Nature in the raw can seem so cruel. But then – I could name a few humans who are not exactly innocent of cruelty.

Crested Pigeons by the dozens

Last week when I was at college I had a short break between lectures. I took this opportunity to have a short ten minute walk through the grounds. Next to the student car park there is an oval and a grassed area where many local people walk their dogs.

Crested Pigeons

Crested Pigeons

Using the term “grassed area” is being somewhat generous. With the water restrictions over the last year and the very hot, dry conditions during our recent summer months the grass is lacking any greenness and is almost dead. There must be enough seed left for the local population of Crested Pigeons to find a feed. I observed approximately 90 Crested Pigeons feeding in an area about the size of three tennis courts. They have obviously been prolific breeders in recent times. This area has many trees and low bushy shrubs in the parks and gardens nearby, so there would be plenty of nesting sites.

The above photo was not taken at the time. It was taken in Clare in another part of South Australia at a time when there had been some rain to green up the grass.