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News from Coquette Point

27/5/2012

 
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Hello from cold and very wet Coquette Point,

The weather systems combined to bring heavy rain to the Wet Tropics on Thursday night. Around 350 mm fell in the Innisfail, Mossman and Cairns’ hinterlands overnight and on Friday all the rivers ran red to the Coral Sea Lagoon.  A low over Victoria has pushed cold air up along the Queensland coast and it was winter woollies all day to-day with the temperature not getting over 18 - freezing for FNQ.

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News from Coquette Point

22/5/2012

 
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Hello from Coquette Point,

I was told by Jake a CCRC staffer that on Wednesday he saw a small male cassowary with three chicks near the new sewerage works alongside Ninds Creek. The chicks were about 40cm tall and their stripes were only just visible. Before Jake or the other workers could take a photograph Dad and the chicks disappeared into the rainforest: wonderful and surprising news.

It is most unusual for cassowary chicks to be born during winter. However, as no chicks were born last year in the Moresby Range/ Coquette Point area perhaps the cassowaries are catching up, after cyclone ‘Yasi’,  now that the forest is producing food again.

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News from Coquette Point

13/5/2012

 
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Hello from the fairy garden at Coquette Point,

I was walking in my garden early Wednesday morning and low and behold I found a van and beside it a tent full of French backpackers. I took a few photos and left them undisturbed to sleep. Later that morning, quite coincidentally,  my neighbour brought his big tractor through on our internal connecting track and he was astonished to see a tent with eight legs running before him.  Above the French screams John W roared with laughter.  Take a look down the bottom of your garden, you never know what you may find.

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News from Coquette Point

6/5/2012

 
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Hello from mysterious Coquette Point,

As the Super Moon rose tonight I am sure I saw ‘dark creatures’ coming out from the shadows.  An eerie eh-eh-eh- call murmured and then shrieked within the mangroves.



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News from Coquette Point

29/4/2012

 
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Hello from Coquette Point,
This morning I woke to the sound of cassowaries honking and roaring and the sound of crashing vegetation as large birds ran through the rainforest. It was a good time to stay indoors.

Today I saw Dot, sub-adult ‘Don’ and ‘Jessie’ with  ‘Little Dad’. They were here for most of the day and when their paths crossed the dominate bird displayed aggressively. For over 10 days now I had not seen ‘Little Dad’ or ‘Jessie’ and I had thought he was already sitting on eggs. However, they are still walking together with Jessie dutifully following ‘Little Dad’s’ every move.
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‘Little Dad’ took a long drink from a bucket of water outside the vegetable garden.

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News from Coquette Point

19/4/2012

 
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Hello from windy Coquette Point,

Cool and sunny Easter weather has morphed into wet and wild gale force winds which have lashed the coast since Thursday and more is to come. An area of low pressure, which is moving west coupled with a very large southern high has turned the normally gentle trade winds into the roaring 40’s.


The butterflies are having difficulty in managing the wind and a pale lemon form, or at least that is what I think it is,  of the Pale Triangle, graphium eurypylus, which is seldom seen in a resting mode, was easy to photograph this week.  Its cousin the green-spotted triangle seemed to cope better with the wind.

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News from Coquette Point

2/4/2012

 
Click on photos to enlarge
Hello from Coquette Point,

The Feast of the Senses festival was held last Sunday and amazingly the rain held off and the sun shone brightly until 3pm and then the skies opened. Kirsty Densmore, the event manager talked me into a breadfruit cooking demonstration. I did not know until I saw this photo that celebrity chef Peter Russell-Clark was looking over my shoulder as I cooked.

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News from Coquette point (Mar 24)

2/4/2012

 
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Hello from camera happy Coquette Point,

When sailors see Frigate birds at sea it is a sign that land is within 200 miles. However, when Frigate birds fly over the land it is time to be afraid, very afraid. Frigate birds over the land are a sign of gale force winds  about to occur and the birds stay, continually in flight, for the duration of the storm. Last Sunday a flock of 60 Greater Frigatebirds arrived and started flying in anticlockwise concentric circles over the Cassowary Coast.

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News from Coquette Point (Mar 17)

2/4/2012

 
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Female Indian Koel
Hello from Coquette Point,

It is with a deep sense of loss that we learnt today that Margaret Whitlam completed her journey on planet Earth.

When Margaret visited Coquette Point in 1975, as guest of honour at a 300 strong gathering of north Queensland women, she expressed her deep concern for the rainforest and the animals that belonged to it.       
She jokingly said to me “ If I lived here I would blow up the bridge and live in solitude in the rainforest”.  Thank you Margaret your life was an example to us all: you made a difference.

The Indian Koels found their voice this week and early every morning the male and female have been ‘singing the rain’ in long wurra-wurra calls that are held for at least ten seconds and finish in mounting shrills.

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News from Coquette point

10/3/2012

 
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Here is a feast of news from Coquette Point as  we catch up the last five weeks....
Mar 3 2012
Hello from sunny Coquette Point,

Another week and still no monsoon. However, we have been having more than enough rain from all sorts of other systems. We can do without the monsoon and its cyclones.

My dear friends Santina Lizzio and Jacque Grima came over for a cuppa this week and we went down to the river looking for crocodiles: what else would a few old girls do on a sunny afternoon.  All our chattering disturbed Charlene but Jackie and Santina had fun comparing their shoe sizes with Charlene’s footprints. Charlene’s shadow was someway in the water off the beach.

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