Unfortunately these might come under the love them or loathe them category. If you live near to a bushland setting and these birds are about, they can invade neighbourhood gardens and create ... well, let's say, chaos. That's the rumour.....
If 'we' left gardens as a natural setting like this, nothing would appear out of place. Excepting maybe a heat-generating incubation mound measuring up to 4 metres (13 feet) wide, to hatch their eggs.
...reading in part: Little survivors, parent birds do not recognise their chicks when they hatch and play no part in raising them.
how neat that vertical tail fan
crossing pathway ahead on the Booyong walk (O'Reilly's Retreat, Lamington National Park, Qld). More on 'the Booyong walk' tomorrow.
Australian Brush-turkey fact-sheet from Birds in Backyards
Nuisance or not, those are good looking turkeys! Not what I'm accustomed to seeing as ours are quite different. This is another new bird for me.
ReplyDeleteBeautiful pictures Carole.
ReplyDeleteThe turkey looks very different as ours.
Regards, Irma
They are beautiful birds, in fact, all birds are fantastic. Pure brilliant.
ReplyDeleteYour turkeys are neat, great photos!
ReplyDeleteEin interessanter Vogel und sehr schöne Fotos.
ReplyDeleteLG Mahilda ♥
really cool bird! and not parenting their chicks? wow!
ReplyDeleteI think our turkeys are a bit more handsomer, but maybe that is just that I am used to seeing them all the time. Interesting they don't help with the young chicks. I believe ours do.
ReplyDeleteGreat shots and interesting information - we have wild turkeys here too but I don't know how they hatch their eggs - I'll have to research that.
ReplyDeleteOoh! I like your photos of the Brush Turkeys much better than mine! Therese said you have posted these!
ReplyDeleteThat is one fasinating bird, well captured and shown.
ReplyDeleteGreat shots there :)
ReplyDeletehmm, interesting that they don't raise their own chicks, but they do have beautiful feathers.
ReplyDeleteGood looking turkey!!! Hope no one takes him home for dinner!
ReplyDeleteThe most I have counted in my backyard is 7. One of my cats sleeps down the back during the day. which wards them off, but he is inside during the night. They create mayhem.
ReplyDeleteI don't have a great opinion of these birds already, but reading that they don't raise their young lowers my opinion even more.
ReplyDeleteGreat snaps though, Carole!!