Lord Howe Island tropicbirds

What a great trip! I loved Lord Howe Island. Loved the hikes, the sunshine, the rain, the rainbows, the clouds, the stars, the people, the coral reef, the fish, the spiders and above all I loved the birds – especially the Red-tailed Tropicbirds.

I hiked up to Malabar Hill three times during our nine days on the island and it’s the part of the island that I miss the most. The experience was enhanced enormously by David Burren’s help, encouragement and company. David is a professional photographer who runs workshops in Australia and overseas (there’s a link to his website on the links page). Two of his images set the scene for the photographs that follow:

 

Kim on Malabar Hill

 

Kim on Malabar Hill – eeek, did I really stand that close to the edge of a 200m cliff face!

 

Red-tailed Tropicbirds are mesmerising to watch in flight, they move quickly and gracefully, and several times I was so entranced by their beauty I forgot to press the shutter button. I’m glad there were plenty of other times when I remembered.

 

 Red-tailed Tropicbird (Phaethon rubricauda)
Canon 7D, 100-400mm L IS USM, 1/640, f/6.3, +1/3, ISO 100, focal length 200mm

 

I particularly like the way the bird is posing in the image above and I like the way blue sky surrounds it as though the clouds have been carefully painted on after the image was taken, including behind the tail streamer to make sure that it is highlighted. Ordinarily I would not favour an image with this kind of head angle but this is one of my favourites, to my mind the head angle suits the pose perfectly.

We spent so long with the tropicbirds that we started recognising and naming individual birds including long tail, two tails, poor old manky foot and seagull (who had no tail streamers). Red-tailed Tropicbirds are 75-95cm long, including their streamers, with a wingspan of about one metre. Juveniles have black bars on their backs, no streamers, and their bills begin black before turning yellow then red. We saw a few birds with two tail streamers but more often we could only discern one streamer.

 

 Red-tailed Tropicbird (Phaethon rubricauda)
Canon 7D, 100-400 L IS USM, 1/2000, f/8.0, ISO 400, focal length 235mm

 

Red-tailed Tropicbirds are listed as vulnerable in NSW and are rarely seen as they spend most of their time at sea and breed high on cliff faces, predominantly on Lord Howe, Norfolk and Christmas Islands. When we were watching the tropicbirds we were more likely to be looking down on them from clifftops or up at them from a beach or boat. I was delighted to see some virtually eye to eye, and thrilled when one flew over me so low that I felt I could have touched it.

 

 Red-tailed Tropicbird – (Phaethon rubricauda)
Canon 7D, 100-400mm L IS USM, 1/2500, f/7.1, ISO 400, focal length 400mm

 

Despite a shutter speed of 1/2500 of a second the bird’s feathers are not frozen in the above image. This bird was rapidly moving its wings to hold its position while it looked towards a tiny cave in the rock wall. During the breeding season tropicbirds lay one egg directly onto rock.

Red-tailed Tropicbirds are generally silent at sea but these birds often called to each other as they swooped by. The end of their tail streamers were often whitish which made me think that the bird in the image above is just growing its streamers. Some birds with short streamers did not have a whitish tip and I wonder if they’d been damaged by fish, rocks or coral.

 

Red-tailed Tropicbird (Phaethon rubricauda)
Canon 7D, 100-400mm L IS USM, 1/2500, f/7.1, ISO 400, focal length 260mm

 

I was happy to get a catchlight in the tropicbird’s eye in the image above and I love the graceful pose with the long sweeping tail streamer. From the damage to the tip of the bird’s primary feathers on its right wing I think it’s the same bird as the one in the fourth image. This is especially interesting as it makes me wonder where it was hiding its streamer – the scallywag!

In my late teens I was onboard a ship going through the Panama Canal when I saw a tropicbird lit up by the soft deck lights at 5am one morning. Since that morning I have longed to see them again and I’m rapt to have finally spent time with these graceful, angelic birds.

Happy birding and magical memories,

Kim

 

 

 

 

 

17 comments to Lord Howe Island tropicbirds

  • was at lord howe november last year, what a place, I so want to go back one day, nice shots

  • Alyssa

    Wow you are so intrepid Ma! Both impressive and scary! Beautiful tropic birds 🙂

  • Hello Kim
    Oh my god, it’s beautiful!
    In Mayotte, I photographed Phaethon lepturus. (White-tailed Tropicbird) But your photographs are wonderful!
    What landscape!!
    Thank you for your visist
    Regards

    • lirralirra

      Thank you for your lovely comments. I had not heard of Mayotte before and have just been reading about it, very interesting. It must have been wonderful to photograph the White-tailed Tropicbirds, wouldn’t it be nice if tropicbirds flew just a little slower!

  • tamsin Ramone

    Love the first image of the tropic bird. They are all good though! Cannot believe you were so close to the edge of the cliff! Scary!

    • lirralirra

      I love the pose of the first tropic bird too, it looks angelic. I can hardly believe I was standing there either but it was by far the best place to see the tropicbirds. Thanks for your comment Tamsin 🙂

  • Wow Kim, great shots ! So happy you had a grand time and it is wonderful to “see” you too.

  • Lannie

    Beautiful birds. I particularly like the first bird on this weeks post. I’m sure that your photos would have been just as good if you had stepped back 8-10 feet 🙂 You’re a scallywag.

    • lirralirra

      I’m glad you liked the birds! If I’d stepped back that far I’d have been over the cliff behind me, it gives me shivers just thinking about it. It’s kind of nice to be a scallywag 😉

  • Wow! What an incredible bird! (Though aren’t they all?) The island also looks incredible.

    • lirralirra

      They were worth waiting for Kathleen. I agree about the other birds too, and about the island! Thanks for stopping by 🙂

  • glenn wormald

    magnificent kim. hard to believe you were hanging off the edge of that cliff but i know it for a fact because i was there! great trip. let do it again. love glenn

    • lirralirra

      It was a great trip and I’d love to go there again! There weren’t too many witnesses, we were off the beaten track on an island that’s off the beaten track. Thanks for carrying my tripod when you weren’t exploring the island by bike 🙂

  • what a nice story, david have done nice pictures about you during your shooting, with a wonderfull landscape around,
    and the bird is beautifull, the red feather is very thin, and this bird is gracious
    bravo kim =)))
    thanks for your email notification, i ve subscribe immediatly =D
    for my blog, it s a very simply blog with daily pictures, all is alreadu organise like that for all aminus3 blogger community, and i cant ad email notification, but i will ask to the administrator if it s possible one day,
    Don t worry, just follow my backlink there if you want, it s simple like that too
    take care

    • lirralirra

      Hi Eric, I’m glad you liked the tropicbirds, they really are beautiful. David did a great job of setting the scene, when I first looked at his photos it was quite scary! Thanks for suggesting the email notification idea, I hope it works. I’ll definitely keep visiting your site, it’s a delight 🙂

Leave a Reply to tamsin Ramone Cancel reply

You can use these HTML tags

<a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <s> <strike> <strong>