north-north-west wrote:Got lots of the usual suspects - echidnas, wombats, snakes, pademelons, wobblies, brushtails, ringtails, blah, blah, blah, but the one that really stunned me was a tiny little possum-like thing with a tufted tail - size of a plump mouse, but looked a lot like a glider, and definitely not an antechinus - in the bushes on the western side of the Cow, when coming back from Mesa/The Calf. I thought they were supposed to be nocturnal, but this was around 4pm on a fairly sunny day.
We were both so surprised we just froze, and then the little blighter dived for cover before I could get the camera out.
Hallu wrote:I'm not sure the eagles enjoy being called "wedgies" lol.
Strider wrote:Wedgies aren't all that uncommon to see. Bandicoots, on the other hand - I've seen less than 5 in my thirteen years in Australia.
troy8880 wrote:I was at acacia flat on the weekend. We woke to quite a number of holes that had been dug by an unknown. Any ideas, bandicoot or other?
colinm wrote:troy8880 wrote:I was at acacia flat on the weekend. We woke to quite a number of holes that had been dug by an unknown. Any ideas, bandicoot or other?
Conical holes are bandicoots, I'm told.
colinm wrote:troy8880 wrote:I was at acacia flat on the weekend. We woke to quite a number of holes that had been dug by an unknown. Any ideas, bandicoot or other?
Conical holes are bandicoots, I'm told.
neilmny wrote:Just keep an eye out and wear gaiters, you'll be OK.
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