Would you like to come out with us tonight and watch some science films? I asked Pliny the Elder this afternoon.
Science films! said Pliny. Normally I would say yes, but I am setting off this evening to do some bird spotting.
In this weather? Pliny that is the height of recklessness. What sort of birds are you going to spot?
I have been thinking about the birds that have supposedly disappeared from the Mount Lofty Ranges, said Pliny.
Supposedly! I thought you believed that they had.
I didn't exactly say that.
True, you didn't. But surely you're not going up to the hills!
I am, said Pliny firmly. I am going to look for the Barking Owl. It is a most interesting bird which is difficult to spot, but easy to identify by its call. It barks like a dog, and some times it screams like a woman or a child. It seems the Aboriginal people used to tell the early settlers the sound was made by a bunyip.
Well, be sure you've seen one, I said, and not just heard one. Because there are a lot of dogs in the hills. And screaming women and children too, I added.
Pliny looked at me sceptically.
You are trying to dissuade me from going, he said, but you won't succeed. I shall rug up warm, wear a waterproof raincoat and carry an umbrella. I shall pack some sandwiches, a banana and a thermos of tea. And I shall take a camera. That reminds me, may I borrow yours?
I don't know, Pliny. What if you drop it in the mud?
But think, said Pliny, if it helps to identify a Barking Owl, what a contribution to the Woodlands Recovery Initiative that would be!
I think they would rather have money, I said, but alright, you can borrow the camera.
Wednesday, August 18, 2010
The Barking Owl
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