From the railway station you can cross over into the village or go down to the river, where the riverwalk forms part of a 3 km loop that ends up at the top of the village. We took the latter. The walk was hot and humid, as expected, but revealed more great birds.
As we walked down to the river, a Forest Kingfisher landed on the sign next to the dock.
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Forest Kingfisher, Kuranda Qld |
I have to confess that I have been tempted to Photoshop the sign to say "No Fishing".
This bird was as cooperative as it's Azure cousin seen on the Daintree River yesterday, turning for a different angle as I approached it for a closer view
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Forest Kingfisher, Kuranda Qld |
and someone managed to capture me in the process...
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Photo courtesy of Joanne Smissen |
We heard the 'ka ka ka' call of what we thought was a Black Butcherbird and soon confirmed it with a sighting of the bird perched deep in the forest beside the river.
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Black Butcherbird, Kuranda Qld |
A little further along the river walk, another unmistakeable call revealed a common favourite.
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Laughing Kookaburra, Kuranda Qld |
As we got deeper into the rainforest, we heard lots of foreign (for a pair of southerners) bird calls but, at one site, they were dominated by the deep "wompoo" call that onomatopoeically identified its owner, which was finally revealed in a more open part of the forest. Not the greatest photograph but I was happy to see the bird so clearly given our difficulty in finding it (and another first time photograph).
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Wompoo Fruit-Dove, Kuranda Qld |
Even the village main street offered up some gems such as this figbird.
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Australasian Figbird, Kuranda Qld |
We returned via the Skyrail, which provided some sensational bird's eye views of the rainforest.