On our recent birding and camping trip we decided to head to Windjana Gorge due to the fact that it had been a long time since we paid a visit to this spectacular gorge. You can only access the gorge during our sunny and warm winter months and the road is well used and very corrugated. The gorge is part of the Napier Range and the rocks are part of the ancient Devonian reef system. The colours are spectacular and most people visit to see the “rocks and the crocs”!! Of course, we were also interested in the birdlife and did the whole of the trail, which is somewhat shortened this year after the Wet Season rains and erosion. It is still a three hour walk and there were very few people doing the entire trail, so the birds were relatively undisturbed.

You enter the trail through a gap in the rocks and you don’t need to go too far to see the remaining water and the spectacular rock formations.

Windjana Gorge entrance

Entrance to Windjana Gorge

Windjana Gorge

Windjana Gorge

The trail is well marked using posts with wallaby footprints on plates. The trail is both through the shade along what would be the riverbank during the Wet Season and also in the actual riverbed, with options in some areas.

Windjana Gorge trail

Trail marked in Windjana Gorge

The first sounds you hear as you enter the gorge are the screeching of Great Bowerbirds and the continuous calling of the Striated Pardalotes frantically looking for a mate. We were surprised to see relatively few Little Corellas in the trees, because on previous visits there had been large noisy flocks of the birds. They sat silently and most people didn’t even appear to notice them.

Little Corellas

Pair of Little Corellas

As you go along the trail you are soon aware of the large numbers of freshwater crocodiles in the remaining water and on the banks. You can walk in the riverbed and it is advisable to remain at least 5 metres from the crocodiles following the National Park guidelines.

Crocodiles

Crocodile

 Freshwater crocodiles

Not everything in the gorge follows the guidelines and we observed several birds ignoring the rules and walking close to the crocodiles! There were Great Egrets, Little Black Cormorants and Pied Cormorants close to the crocodiles and one White-faced Heron was almost teasing the crocodile as it walked in front of it…..

White-faced Heron & crocodile

White-faced Heron and crocodile

Several Black-fronted Dotterels were observed along the water’s edge and there were both Azure and Sacred Kingfishers diving from the nearby trees.

Black-fronted Dotterel

Black-fronted Dotterel

The trails were also being used by Peaceful Doves and Double-barred Finches as they searched for food. Double-barred Finches were the most common finch throughout the gorge and were as vocal as ever. We really are lucky that the majority of birds in Australia are vocal and it does make it easier to find them.

Double-barred Finches

Double-barred Finches on the trail

There were also small groups of Little Woodswallows perched on branches throughout the gorge and their chocolate brown colour added to the surrounding environment.

Little Woodswallows

Pair of Little Woodswallows

We came across several pairs of Banded Honeyeaters on our trip and I had almost given up on photographing them. They are lovely to observe and we rarely see them, so you tend to spend too much time looking at them and not photographing them. On top of that they like dense foliage, which is not very good for photographing them. However, we were lucky enough to have a pair land in the top of a Boab tree and I was able to photograph them before they dropped back into dense foliage again. We were not so lucky with the three Green-backed Gerygones and we failed to get them in a position where the green didn’t blend in with all the green of the foliage to enable us to photograph them.

Banded Honeyeaters

 Banded Honeyeaters

This is a spectacular gorge to visit for several hours and you are also able to camp outside the gorge itself in the National Park campsite. During our short visit we observed 45 bird species and it is also supposed to be a good place to observe various bats and mammals after dark.

 

Written by Clare M
Clare and her husband, Grant, have lived permanently in Broome, Western Australia since 1999 after living in various outback locations around Western Australia and Darwin. She has lived in the Middle East and the United States and traveled extensively in Europe. She monitors Pied Oystercatchers breeding along a 23km stretch of Broome's coastline by bicycle and on foot. She chooses not to participate in social media, but rather wander off into the bush for peace and tranquility. Thankfully she can write posts in advance and get away from technology!