Dawn at Rays Rest |
There are also extensive shell banks along the coast that
provide safe roosting spots at high tide & make it ideal for bird watching,
which is why we have been here for the last two days. The shell banks or
cheniers have formed over the past 4500 years and are a rare geological site
themselves. Miranda is regarded as the finest example in the world of an active
shell chenier plain. The shell ridges have been built off shore and each
ridge has gradually been pushed landward
by tide & storm. Eventually the ridge is raised above the tide.
(To see the birds better click on the photos to enlarge them)
(To see the birds better click on the photos to enlarge them)
A new chenier is formed across the mudflats |
Oystercatchers gather on the shell bank while godwits & rednots wait for the tide to rise before moving. |
Godwits(the larger bird) & Redknots; ruddy colour breasts in both birds are their breeding plummage |
Over on the salt ponds behind us Pied Stilts & Wrybills settled, Wrybills are endemic to NZ and unique in that it is the only species of bird in the world with a beak that is bent sideways (always to the right). There are only a few thousand wrybills left in NZ and over 40% of the population winter over at Miranda after breeding on the braided rivers of the South Island.
Pied Stilts(background) & Wrybills |
If you would like to see more bird photos, here is the link to my Miranda Shorebird Flickr set.
Arriving home as the sky turned a beautiful crimson our van looks a little lonely without the ute.
Another great day 'Out There' |
Wow! So that's where all the birds are! Miranda will definitely be on our visiting list. Trish.
ReplyDeleteHi Trish, yes it's an amazing bird watching site & you get to stay free for 2 nights at Rays Rest although we've now moved onto the Miranda Top 10 Park to do our chores & have a lovely hot swim in their thermal pool.
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