Some of the other day trips we included in the Kangaroo Island trip were Raptor Domain, one of the kids favourites. We watched the three shows, Venom Pit, In-flight (bird show) and Fang-tastic, where the two very knowledgeable guides showed us local reptiles like scorpions, tiger snakes, and some less venomous ones (pythons, bearded dragons, sleepy lizards), and of course the bird show. We enjoyed waking up Casper the barn owl, seeing him pop out of his hollow tree then proceeding to hop across our knees, but the performances by the hobby and wedgetail eagle were also pretty impressive. Hannah, Oscar and Xavier all jumped up to hold a boobok owl.
Xavier and I went on a hunt for the rare Glossy Black Cockatoo, and found a dozen of them only a few kilometres from our camp. Only about 200 live on the whole island.
Next stop was Cliffords honey farm whose pure Ligurian bees were introduced from Italy by early settlers and today Kangaroo Island has the purest Ligurian bees, even exporting them back to Italy. We all tasted the honey ice-cream before moving on and yes it was good. Later that day whilst exploring a cave in D’Estrees Bay we found a cave housing a wild Ligurian beehive. On the same beach Xavier found what appears to be a fossilised whale tooth and this made his day – let us know what you think it is from the picture above.
Along D’Estree Bay, in Cape Gantheaume Conservation Park we stopped to see the point where Ospreys have nested for 150 years. A huge nest sits on top of a flat rocky headland that just out at the end of the beach. Two chicks sat patiently in the nest awaiting the return of their parents, hopefully with a feed of fish. When I last visited 17 years ago the same nest had a different two chicks sitting there too.
Then we had to visit Seal Bay, home to the Australian Sea lion, where we wandered onto the beach to get a closer view of the sea lions who come to shore after 3 days swimming and feeding for a well deserved rest. At one end of the beach a boardwalk provides views of a Humpback Whale skeleton, placed in the dunes after the dead calf washed ashore in the 1980s. We took a minor detour on the way home to take in the azure waters and picturesque Vivonne Bay – we all loved Kangaroo Island and will be back!
Absolutely loved the black cockatoo, well spotted. Xavier glad to hear you are finding some real treasures, you must be having the best time. Happy New Year to all and may your adventures continue
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I’m enjoying the south australian updates! Happy new year!
Check out this video on YouTube its a great clip on KI
Nick
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Nick
Happy NY to you and family. Summer has arrived, making up for the cold and wind we experienced prior in Tassie. Unfortunately the wind is making the fire-fighting hard work in the Adelaide Hills where they are experiencing the worst fires in something like 30 years.
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Omg how did you do it! Gave me the creeps looking at it.
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Judy
We know how much you like the snakes – that one was specially for you. The only venomous one stayed in the pit thank goodness
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LOVING ALL YOUR FABULOUS PHOTO’S ESPECIALLY THE KIDS. THEY SEEM TO BE HAVING A BALL
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Fossilised whale tooth looks like a pretty good guess, I’d be sticking with that assumption. That’s awesome!
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Thanks for the input. The museum in Adelaide said it looked like a sperm whale tooth but it definitely feels like it has been fossilized. Will check in more detail later
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